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UC  SOUTHERN  REGIONAL  LIBRARY  FACILITY 

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lasned  January  27, 1912. 


^1    United  States  Department  of  Agriculture, 


DIVISION  OF  PUBLICATIONS— CIRCULAR  19. 

[Prepared  in  the  Agricultural  Education  Service  of  the  Office  of  Experiment  Stations.] 

JOS.  A.  ARNOLD,  Editor  and  Chief. 


PUBnCATIONS  OF  THE  DEPARTMENT  OF  AGRICTJLTUEE  CLASSI- 
FIED FOR  THE  USE  OF  TEACHERS. 

INTRODTJCTION. 

A  large  percentage  of  the  requests  that  come  from  teachers  and 
others  to  the  Department  of  Agriculture  for  its  publications  lack 
definiteness  of  title  or  carry  some  other  indication  of  uncertainty  as 
to  the  particular  information  desired.  Many  publications  are  doubt- 
less sent  out  that  do  not  meet  the  real  requirements  of  those  who 
apply  for  them,  either  because  of  a  lack  of  information  on  the  part 
of  the  applicant  as  to  the  publications  available  or  on  the  part  of  the 
department  as  to  the  particular  character  or  purpose  of  the  infor- 
mation sought.  This  circular  has  been  prepared  with  the  design  of 
assisting  toward  a  more  economical  and  intelligent  use  of  the  Govern- 
ment publications  on  agricultural  topics  by  classifying  them  with 
reference  to  subjects  commonly  taught  in  the  schools. 

It  is  particularly  desirable  that  teachers  should  be  prepared  to  use 
these  publications  to  the  best  advantage.  While  instructors  in 
special  subjects  in  the  agricultural  colleges  of  this  country  have  long 
made  extensive  use  of  the  bulletins  of  this  department,  it  is  believed 
that  college  teachers  in  general  (outside  the  agricultural  specialists) 
and  a  vastly  larger  number  of  teachers  in  the  public  schools  have  not 
fully  appreciated  the  range  of  information  useful  in  teaching  and 
study  that  is  embodied  in  these  publications.  With  the  widespread 
interest  now  awakened  in  agricultural  education,  it  is  expected  that 
many  teachers  will  rapidly  become  intelligently  acquainted  with  what 
the  department  offers  that  is  available  for  school  work. 

The  publications  herein  classified  for  such  use,  with  few  exceptions, 
were  originally  designed  for  other  purposes,  and  so — like  all  other 
illustrative  and  supplementary  aids — require  careful  discrimination 
17385°— Cir.  19—12 ^1 


2 

on  the  teacher's  part  in  ordering  and  using  them.  The  supply  of 
some  of  these  publications  will  occasionally  become  exhausted  tem- 
porarily or  permanently.  Usually,  however,  they  are  reprinted  or 
are  superseded  by  others  better  adapted  to  the  purpose  whenever  it 
is  evident  that  they  serve  a  lasting  interest. 

Certain  publications  are  issued  annually,  such  as  the  Yearbook  of 
the  Department  of  Agriculture  and  reports  of  the  various  bureaus- 
Of  these,  only  the. Yearbook  is  of  popular  interest,  and  teachers  can 
best  procure  it  by  application  to  their  own  Congressman  or  United 
States  Senator.  The  various  volumes  thus  secured  should  be  used 
as  a  permanent  part  of  the  school  library.  The  Yearbook  is  always 
finely  illustrated,  often  with  colored  plates,  and  contains  much 
material  that  can  be  used  in  teaching  a  variety  of  subjects.  By 
noting  in  the  various  lists  the  date  given  for  each  Yearbook  reprint 
and  the  number  of  desirable  reprints  in  any  one  year,  the  teacher  can 
usually  determine  whether  it  will  be  more  satisfactory  to  procure  a 
particular  Yearbook  or  order  the  reprints  separately.  Five  hundred 
thousand  Yearbooks  are  printed  annually,  and  of  these,  470,000  are 
reserved  for  distribution  by  Members  of  Congress, 

The  second  class  of  publications  consists  of  other  departmental 
reports,  bureau  bulletins,  and  technical  papers.  Of  these,  each  main 
branch  of  the  department  has  its  separate  series,  in  which  the  pub- 
lications are  numbered  consecutively.  These  are  issued  only  in  small 
editions,  for  limited  distribution,  and  so  have  not  been  included  in 
the  following  lists. 

The  third  class  consists  of  Farmers'  Bulletins,  circulars.  Yearbook 
reprints,  and  other  popular  papers.  These  are  published  in  large 
editions  for  free  general  distribution,  but  the  demand  for  the  Farmers' 
Bulletins  often  exceeds  the  ability  of  the  department  to  supply  them 
in  sufficient  quantity  for  class  use.  In  such  cases  teachers  are 
referred  to  their  Senators  or  Representatives  in  Congress,  who  are 
authorized  by  law  to  distribute  four-fifths  of  the  total  number 
published. 

There  is  no  list  of  persons  who  receive  all  the  publications  as 
issued,  as  tliis  would  be  very  wasteful  and  unsatisfactory.  Instead, 
a  J^Ionthly  List  of  [departmsnt]  Publications  is  sent  regularly  to  all 
applicants,  from  which  they  can  order  by  proper  title  and  number 
any  publication  desired.  The  department  also  publishes  for  free 
distribution  a  Monthly  List  of  State  Experiment  Station  Publications 
as  they  are  received  from  time  to  time  by  the  Office  of  Experiment 
Stations.  A  teacher  who  is  registered  (on  application)  to  receive 
this  list  may  thus  keep  informed  concerning  any  station  publications 
that  might  be  useful  in  school  work.  These  publications  are  not 
distributed  by  this  department,  but  may  be  procured  from  the 
directors  of  the  several  experiment  stations. 

(CIr.iq 


Avoid  requesting  a  large  list  of  publications  on  different  subjects 
at  one  time  qt  of  publications  whose  use  is  to  be  distributed  over  a 
long  period  of  school  work.  For  reasons  already  indicated  it  must 
be  the  policy  of  the  department  to  limit  the  distribution  of  publica- 
tions to  actual  present  needs  as  nearly  as  possible,  so  that  the  funds 
available  for  purposes  of  publication  can  be  made  to  benefit  the  largest 
possible  number  of  real  users.  One  of  the  chief  purposes  kept  in 
mind  in  the  preparation  of  this  circular  is  to  increase  the  actual  value 
of  the  department  publications  to  teachers  in  the  schools.  Teachers 
of  correlated  subjects  in  the  same  school,  as  physiology  and  domestic 
science,  botany  and  agronomy,  or  zoology  and  farm  animals,  may 
economize  not  only  in  the  number  of  bulletins  used,  but  also  in  their 
own  and  their  pupils'  work  by  comparing  lists  before  ordering  pub- 
lications. A  limited  number  of  bulletins  carefully  studied  by  the 
teacher  or  the  class,  or  assigned  to  certain  members  for  individual 
reports,  are  of  much  greater  service  than  a  hundred  forgotten  on  the 
shelves  at  home  or  in  the  school  library. 

(Cii.  lOJ 


PUBLICATIONS  ADAPTED  TO  TEACHING  AOEICUlTimE. 

Note.— Copies  of  publications  in  this  list  will  be  sent  lre«,  on  application  to  the  Secretary  ot  Agriculture, 
WuhinKton,  D.  C,  as  lonjj  as  the  department  supply  lasts.  When  this  supply  is  exhausted  applicants  will 
be  referred  to  the  Superintendent  of  Documents,  Oovemment  PrlntinR  Office,  from  whom  the  publicationi 
can  be  obtained  at  a  nominal  price.  In  orderinK  publications  be  careful  to  state  not  only  the  number  of 
the  document,  but  the  kind  of  publication  (Farmers'  Bulletin, circular,  Yearbook  reprint,  or  doctunent), 
th«  luune  of  the  issuing  bureau  when  indicated  in  the  list,  and  the  title  of  the  publication. 

I.  EDUCATIONAL. 

1.  School  Courses. 

OFFICE   OF   EXPERIMENT  STATIONS  CIBCtTLARS. 

49.  Secondary  CJouraes  in  Agriculture.     Pp.  10. 

60.  The  Teaching  of  Agriculture  in  the  Rural  Common  Schools.     Pp.  20. 

69.  A  Four-yeara'  Course  in  Agriculture.     Pp.  36. 

77.  (Rev.).  A  Secondary  Course  in  Agronomy.     Pp.  44. 

84.  Education  for  Country  Life.     Pp.  40. 

90.  Normal  School  Instruction  in  Agriculture.     Pp.  31. 

91.  Secondary  Education  in  Agriculture  in  the  United  States.     Pp.  11. 

97.  Institutions  in  the  United  States  Giving  Instruction  in  Agriculture.     Pp.  15. 

98.  Progress  in  Agricultural  Education  Extension.     Pp.  12. 
100.  A  Secondary  Course  in  Animal  Production.     Pp.  56. 

106.  The  American  System  of  Agrictiltural  Education.     Pp.  28,  pis.  8. 
111.  Federal  Legislation,  Regulations,  and  Rulings  Affecting  Agricultural  Coll^ea 
and  Experiment  Stations.     Pp.  24. 

OFFICB   OF  BXPERIHBNT  STATIONS   DOCUMENTS. 

584.  The  Need  of  Better  Courses  of  Preparation  for  Work  in  Applied  Botany.     Pp.  3. 
708.  Organization  and  Work  of  Agricultural  Experiment  Stations  in  the  United  States. 

Pp.  24,  pis.  5. 
803,  930,  1218,  and  1311.  Progress  in  Agricultural  Education.    (Illustrated;  for  the 

years  1904,  1905,  1908,  1909,  and  1910.) 
987.  Organization  and  Work  of  the  OflSce  of  Experiment  Stations.     Pp.  29. 
1301.  Agriculture  as  First  Year  Science.     Pp.  12. 
1388.  Statistics  of  Land-grant  Collies  and  Agricultural  Experiment  Stations,  1910. 

Pp.43. 

farmers'  bulletins. 

218.  The  School  Garden.     Pp.  40,  figs.  33. 

408.  School  Exercises  in  Plant  Production.     Pp.  48,  figs.  39. 

409.  School  Lessons  on  Com.     Pp.  29,  figs.  12. 
423.  Forest  Nurseries  for  Schools.     Pp.  47,  figs.  8. 

428.  Testing  Farm  Seeds  in  the  Home  and  in  the  Rural  School.    Pp.  47,  figs.  32. 
468.  Forestry  in  Nature  Study.    Pp.  43,  figs.  13. 

FOREST  SERVICE   CIRCULARS. 

96.  Arbor  Day.    Pp.  4. 
130.  Forestry  in  the  Public  Schools.    Pp.  20. 
(Or.  m  (4) 


TEARBOOK  REPHINTS. 

382.  The  Use  of  Illustrative  Material  in  Teaching  Agriculture  in  Rural  Schools.     Pp. 

18,  pis.  3,  figs.  10.     (1905.) 
445.  Training  Courses  for  Teachers  of  Agriculture.     Pp.  14.     (1907.) 

2.  School  Extension  Work. 

farmers'  bulletins. 

134.  Tree  Planting  on  Rural  School  Grounds.     Pp.  32,  figs.  17. 

155.  How  Insects  Affect  Health  in  Rural  Districts.     Pp.  20,  figs.  16. 

157.  The  Propagation  of  Plants.     Pp.  24,  figs.  22. 

185.  Beautifying  the  Home  Grounds.     Pp.  24,  figs.  8. 

195.  Annual  Flowering  Plants.    Pp.  48. 

218.  The  School  Garden.    Pp.  40,  figs.  33. 

270.  Modem  (jonveniences  for  the  Farm  Home.     Pp.  48,  figs.  26. 

385.  Boys'  and  Girls'  Agricultural  Clubs.     Pp.  23,  figs.  11. 

422.  Demonstration  Work  on  Southern  Farms.     Pp.  19,  figs.  4. 

BURBAIT  OP  ANIMAL  INDUSTRY  CIBCULAK. 

151.  Competitive  Exhibitions  of  Milk  and  Cream.     Pp.  36. 

BUKEAU  OP  PLANT  INDUSTRY. 

Circ.  21.  Farmers'  Cooperative  Demonstration  Work  in  Relation  to  Rural  Improve- 
ment.    Pp.  20. 
Doc.  644.  Boys'  Demonstration  Work:  The  Com  Clubs.     Pp.  7. 
Doc.  647.  Resxilts  of  Boys'  Demonstration  Work  in  Com  Clubs  in  1910.     Pp.  7,  figs.  3. 

BUREAU  OP  BIOLOGICAL  SURVEY  CIRCULARS. 

17.  Bird  Day  in  the  Schools.     Pp.  4. 

78.  Seed-eating  Mammals  in  Relation  to  Reforestation.     Pp.  5,  figs.  3- 

WEATHER  BUREAU. 

Leaflet.     Wind-barometer  Table.     Pp.  2. 

Circular.     Explanation  of  the  Weather  Map.     Pp.  4,  pi.  1. 

OFFICE    OP  THE    SECRETARY  CIRCULAR. 

24.  The  Man  Who  Works  with  His  Hands.     Pp.  14. 

OFFICE    OP   EXPERIMENT   STATIONS. 

Circ.     79.  Form  of  Organization  for  Movable  Schools  of  Agriculture.     Pp.  8. 
85.  Farmers'  Institutes  for  Women.     Pp.  16. 
99.  Farmers'  Institutes  for  Young  People.     Pp.  40. 
109.  Agricultural  Fair  Associations  and  Their  Utilization  in  Agricultural  Edu- 
cation and  Improvement.     Pp.  21. 
Doc.  1011.  Form  of  Organization  for  Farmers'  Institutes.     Pp.  17. 

1390.  The  Farmers'  Institutes  in  the  United  States,  1910.     Pp.  37. 

YEARBOOK   REPRINTS. 

283,  330,  399,  450,  521,  and  549.  Promising  New  Fraita.     (Illustrated  with  colored 

plates,  for  years  1902,  1903,  1905,  1907,  1908,  1909,  and  1910.) 

284.  Plants  as  a  Factor  in  Home  Adomment.     Pp.  18,  pis.  3,  figs.  3.     (1902.) 
(Cir.  191 


443.  Does  it  Pay  the  Parmer  to  Protect  Birds?    Pp.  14,  pin.  4.     (1907.) 

457.  Hygienic  Water  Suppliea  for  Farui.H.     Pp.  10,  pi.  1,  figH.  4.     (1907.) 

601.  The  Farmere*  CJooperative  Demon.stration  Work.     Pp.  8,  pis.  4.     (1909.) 

518.  eomforts  and  Conveniences  in  Farmers'  Homes.     Pp.  11,  figs.  6.     (1909.) 

622.  How  Farmers  May  Utilize  the  Special  Warnings  of  the  Weather  Bureau,     Pp. 

11.     (1909.) 
627.  Community  Work  in  the  Rural  High  School.     Pp.  16,  pis.  4.     (1910.) 

II.  PLANT  PRODUCTION. 

1.  Agronomy, 

(Including  Soils,  Fertilizers,  Field  Crops,  and  Crop  Pests.) 

farmers'  bulletins.* 

27.  Flax  for  Seed  and  Fiber.    Pp.  16. 

35.  Potato  Culture.     Pp.  24,  figs.  2. 

48.  The  Manuring  of  Cotton.     Pp.  24.     (South.) 

52.  (Rev.).  The  Sugar  Beet.     Pp.  48.  figs.  24. 

81.  Com  Culture  in  the  South.    Pp.  24. 

88.  Alkali  Lands.     Pp.  23,  fig.  1. 
110.  Rice  Culture  in  the  United  States.    Pp.  28. 
132.  Insect  Enemies  of  Growing  Wheat.     Pp.  40,  figs.  25. 
139.  Emmer:  A  Grain  for  Semiarid  Regions.     Pp.  16,  figs.  3. 
164.  Rape  as  a  Forage  Crop.     Pp.  16,  fig.  1. 
167.  Cassava.     Pp.  32,  figs.  11. 
192.  Barnyard  Manure.     Pp.  32,  figs.  4. 
209.  Controlling  the  Boll  Weevil  in  Cotton  Seed  and  at  Ginneries.    Pp.  32,  fig.  1. 

(South.) 
211.  The  Use  of  Paris  Green  in  Controlling  the  Cotton-boll  Weevil.     Pp.22.     (South.) 
217.  Essential  Steps  in  Securing  an  Early  Crop  of  Cotton.     Pp.  16.     (South.) 
224.  Canadian  Field  Peas.    Pp.  16,  figs.  4. 
229.  The  Production  of  Good  Seed  Com.     Pp.  23,  figs.  10. 
245.  The  Renovation  of  Wom-out  Soils.     Pp.  16. 
250.  The  Prevention  of  Stinking  Smut  of  Wheat  and  Looae  Smut  of  Oats.    Pp.  16, 

figs.  7.  C 

253.  The  Germination  of  Seed  Com.     Pp.  16,  figs.  4. 
257.  Soil  Fertility.     Pp.  40,  figs.  2. 

266.  Mans^ment  of  Soils  to  Conserve  Moisture.     Pp.  30,  figs.  7. 
271.  Forage-crop  Practices  in  Western  Oregon  and  Western  Washington.     Pp.  39, 

figs.  4. 
274.  Flax  Culture.     Pp.  36,  figs.  11.     (Northwest.) 
279.  A  Method  of  Eradicating  Johnson  Grass.     Pp.  16,  figs.  8. 

285.  The  Advantage  of  Planting  Heavy  Cotton  Seed.     Pp.  16,  figs.  6.     (South.) 

286.  Comparative  Value  of  Whole  Cotton  Seed  and  Cottonseed  Meal  in  Fertilizing 

Cotton.    Pp.  14,  figs.  2.    (South.) 
289.  Beans.     Pp.  28,  figs.  12.     (North.) 
294.  Farm  Practice  in  the  Columbia  Basin  Uplands.    Pp.  30,  figs.  9.    (Northwest.) 

299.  Diversified  Farming  Under  the  Plantation  System.     Pp.  14.     (South.) 

300.  Some  Important  Grasses  and  Forage  Plants  for  the  Gulf  Coast  Region.     Pp.  16, 

figs.  5. 

>  See  also  many  bulletina  in  the  list  under  Experiment  Statioa  Work,  p.  23. 
IClr.  1»J 


302.  Sea  Island  Cotton:  Its  Culture,  Improvement,  and  Diseases.    Pp.  48,  figs.  13. 

(Southeast.) 
304.  Growing  and  Curing  Hops.     Pp.  -39,  figs.  20. 
306.  Dodder  in  Relation  to  Farm  Seeds.    Pp.  27,  figs.  10. 
310.  A  Successful  Alabama  Diversification  Farm.    Pp.  24,  figs.  4. 

312.  A  Successful  Southern  Hay  Farm.    Pp.  15. 

313.  Harvesting  and  Storing  Com.     Pp.  29,  figs.  17. 

314.  A  Method  of  Breeding  Early  Cotton  to  Escape  Boll-weevil  Damage,    Pp.  28. 

(South.) 
318.  Cowpeas.     Pp.  28,  figs.  8.     (South.) 

322.  Milo  as  a  Dry-land  Crop.     Pp.  23,  figs.  9.     (West.) 

323.  Clover  Farming  on  the  Sandy  Jack-pine  Lands  of  the  North.     Pp.  24,  fig.  1. 

324.  Sweet  Potatoes.    Pp.  39,  figs.  24. 

331.  Forage  Crops  for  Hogs  in  Kansas  and  Oklahoma.     Pp.  24. 

339.  Alfalfa.     Pp.  48,  figs.  14.  ^  ^,. 

343.  The  Cultivation  of  Tobacco  in  Kentucky  and  Tennessee.    Pp.  28,  figs.  13. 

344.  The  Boll-weevil  Problem,  with  Special  Reference  to  Means  of  Reducing  Damage. 

Pp.  46,  figs.  9. 
362.  Conditions  Affecting  the  Value  of  Market  Hay.    Pp.  29,  figs.  7. 

372.  Soy  Beans.     Pp.  26,  figs.  6. 

373.  Irrigation  of  Alfalfa.     Pp.  48,  figs.  17. 

382.  The  Adulteration  of  Forage-plant  Seeds.     Pp.  23,  figs.  19. 

383.  How  to  Destroy  English  Sparrows.     Pp.  11,  figs.  4. 

386.  Potato  Culture  on  Irrigated  Farms  of  the  West.     Pp.  15,  figs.  3. 

398.  Farm  Practices  in  the  Use  of  Conunercial  Fertilizers  in  the  South  Atlantic  States. 

Pp.  24,  figs.  2. 

399.  The  Irrigation  of  Grain.    Pp.  23,  figs.  7. 

400.  A  More  Profitable  Corn-planting  Method.  Pp.  14,  figs.  5. 
402.  Canada  Blue  Grass:  Its  Culture  and  Uses.  Pp.  20,  figs.  7. 
406.  Soil  Conservation.     Pp.  15. 

410.  Potato  Culls  as  a  Source  of  Industrial  Alcohol.     Pp.  40,  figs.  10. 

414.  Com  Cultivation.    Pp.  32,  figs.  25. 

415.  Seed  Com.     Pp.  12,  figs.  23. 
417.  Rice  Culture.    Pp.  30. 

420.  Oata:  Distribution  and  Uses.     Pp.  24,  figs.  4. 

421.  Control  of  Blowing  Soils.     Pp.  23,  figs.  10. 
424.  Oats:  Growing  the  Crop.    Pp.  44,  figs.  13. 

427.  Barley  Culture  in  the  Southern  States.    Pp.  16,  figs.  6. 

428.  Testing  Farm  Seeds  in  the  Home  and  in  the  Rural  School.    Pp.  47,  figs.  32. 
431.  The  Peanuts.    Pp.  38,  figs.  20. 

436.  Winter  Oats  for  the  South.    Pp.  32,  figs.  9. 

441.  Lespedeza,  or  Japan  Clover.     Pp.  19,  figs.  6. 

443.  Barley:  Growing  the  Crop.     Pp.  48,  figs.  17. 

448.  Better  Grain-sorghum  Crops.     Pp.  36,  figs.  13. 

455.  Red  Clover.    Pp.  48,  figs.  25. 

458.  The  Best  Two  Sweet  Sorghums  for  Forage.    Pp.  23,  figs.  7. 

462.  The  Utilization  of  Logged-off  Land  for  Pastures  in  Western  Oregon  and  Western 

Washington.     Pp.  20,  figs.  5. 
464.  The  Eradication  of  Quack  Grass.     Pp.  11,  figs.  6. 

BUREAU   OF   PLANT  INDUSTRY. 

Circ.    5.  Barley  Culture  in  the  Northem  Great  Plains.    Pp.  12. 
8  (Rev.).    The  Smuts  of  Sorghum.    Pp.  8. 
ICir.  19] 


CSrc.  30.  Improvement  of  the  Oat  C5rop.    Pp.  10. 

50.  Three  Much  MiBreprcsented  Sorghume.     Pp.  14,  figs.  2. 

52.  Wart  Disease  of  the  Potato.    Pp.  11,'  pis.  2. 

67.  The  Cultivation  of  Hemp  in  the  United  States.    Pp.  7,  fig.  1. 

61.  Dry-land  Grains  in  the  Great  Basin.    Pp.  39,  pis.  2. 

62.  The  Separation  of  Seed  Barley  by  the  Specific  Gravity  Method.    Pp.  6, 

fig.  1. 

63.  Methods  of  Legume  Inoculation.    Pp.  6. 

66.  Cotton  Selection  on  the  Farm  by  the  Characters  of  the  Stalks,  Leaves,  and 
Bolls.     Pp.  23. 

73.  The  Distinguishing  Characters  of  the  Seeds  of  Quack  Grass  and  of  Certain 

Wheat  Grasses.    Pp.  9,  figs.  7. 

74.  The  Sulphur  Bleaching  of  Commercial  Oats  and  Barley.     Pp.  13,  figs.  4. 
76.  The  Relation  of  Crowa-gall  to  Legume  Inoculation.    Pp.  6,  figs.  4. 

D^.  441.  Commercial  Fertilizers:  Their  Uses  and  Value.    Pp.  — . 

485.  The  Selection  of  Cotton  and  Com  Seed  for  Southern  Farms.    Pp.  3. 
603.  Fall-breaking  and  the  Preparation  of  the  Seed  Bed.    Pp.  8,  figs.  2. 
619.  The  Production  of  Cotton  under  Boll-weevil  Conditions.     Pp.  8. 
631.  Farm  Fertilizers.    Pp.  8. 
633.  Distribution  of  Cotton  Seed  in  1911.    Pp.  13. 

BUREAU  OF  ENTOMOLOOT  CIBCULABS. 

4  (2.  Ser.).    The  Army  Worm.    Pp.  5,  figs.  3. 
69.  The  Com  Rootrworms.    Pp.  8,  figs.  3. 

66  (Rev.).  The  Joint-worm  (affecting  grain  crops).     Pp.  7,  figs.  6. 
67.  Clover  Root-borer.    Pp.  5. 

69.  Some  Insects  Affecting  the  Production  of  Red  Clover  Seed.    Pp.  9,  figs.  8. 

(North.) 

70.  The  Hessian  Fly.     Pp.  16,  figs.  16. 

87.  The  Colorado  Potato  BeeUe.     Pp.  15,  figs.  6. 

95.  The  Moat  Important  Step  in  the  Control  of  the  Boll  Weevil.    Pp.  8.    (South.) 
113.  The  Chinch  Bug.     Pp.  27,  figs.  8. 
116.  The  Larger  Comstalk-borer.     Pp.  8,  figs.  4. 

118.  A  PredaceouB  Mite  Proves  Noxious  to  Man.     Pp.  24,  figs.  13. 

119.  The  Clover  Root-borer.     Pp.  5,  figs.  4. 

123.  Methods  of  Controlling  Tobacco  Insects.     Pp.  17,  figs.  11. 
133.  The  Alialfa  Caterpillar.     Pp.  14,  figs.  8. 
137.  The  Alfalfa  Weevil.    Pp.  9,  figs.  10. 

BUREAU   OF  SOILS  CIRCULARS.* 

13.  The  Work  of  the  Bureau  of  Soils.     Pp.  13. 

18.  The  Wire-basket  Method  for  Determining  the  Manurial  Requirements  of  Soils. 
Pp.  6,  figs.  2. 

22.  Soils  of  the  Eastern  United  States  and  Their  Use— I.    The  Norfolk  Fine  Sandy 

Loam.     Pp.  16. 

23.  Soib  of  the  Eastern  United  States  and  Their  Use— II.    The  Norfolk  Fine  Sand. 

Pp.  16. 

■  County  soil  survey  advance  sheets  may  be  bad  by  a  teacber  teaching  agriculture  in  a  county  in  wbicb 
a  soil  survey  has  been  mads. 
[Cir.  19] 


24.  Soils  of  the  Eastern  United  States  and  Their  Use — III.    The  Portsmouth  Sandy 

Loam.     Pp.  12. 

25.  Soils  of  the  Eastern  United  States  and.  Their  Use — IV.    The  Sassafras  Silt  Loam. 

Pp.  14. 

27.  Soils  of  the  Eastern  United  States  and  Their  Use — V.    The  Cecil  Sandy  Loam. 

Pp.  19. 

28.  Soils  of  the  Eastern  United  States  and  Their  Use— VI.    The  Cecil  Clay.     Pp.  16. 

29.  Soils  of  the  Eastern  United  States  and  Their  Use — VII.     The  Hagerstown  Loam. 

Pp.  18. 

30.  Soils  of  the  Eastern  United  States  and  Their  Use— VIII.     The  Clarksville  Silt 

Loam.     Pp.  15. 

31.  Soils  of  the  Eastern  United  States  and  Their  Use — IX.    The  Miami  Clay  Loam. 

Pp.  17. 

32.  Soils  of  the  Eastern  United  States  and  Their  Use — X.    The  Marshall  Silt  Loam, 

Pp.  18. 

33.  Soils  of  the  Eastern  United  States  and  Their  Use — XI.    The  Knox  Silt  Loam. 

Pp.  17. 

34.  Soils  of  the  Eastern  United  States  and  Their  Use — XII.    The  Carrington  Loam. 

Pp.  15. 

35.  Soils  of  the  Eastern  United  States  and  Their  Use— XIII.    The  Memphis  Silt 

Loam.     Pp.  19. 

36.  SoHs  of  the  Eastern  United  States  and  Their  Use — XIV.    The  Fargo  Clay  Loam. 

Pp.  15. 

37.  Soils  of  the  Eastern  United  States  and  Their  Use — XV.    The  Clyde  Loam. 

Pp.  16. 

38.  Soils  of  the  Eastern  United  States  and  Their  Use— XVI.    The  Dekalb  Silt  Loam. 

Pp.  17. 

39.  Soils  of  the  Eastern  United  States  and  Their  Use — XVII.    The  Porters  Loam 

and  Porters  Black  Loam.     Pp.  19. 

40.  Soils  of  the  Eastern  United  States  and  Their  Use— XVIII.    The  Wabash  Silt 

Loam.     Pp.  15. 

41.  Soils  of  the  Eastern  United  States  and  Their  Use— XIX.    The  Wabash  Clay. 

Pp.  16. 

42.  Soils  of  the  Eastern  United  States  and  Their  Use— XX.    The  Trinity  Clay. 

Pp.  13. 

44.  Soils  of  the  Eastern  United  States  and  Their  Use— XXI.    The  Norfolk  Sand. 

Pp.  18. 

45.  Soils  of  the  Eastern  United  States  and  Their  Use— XXII.    The  Norfolk  Sandy 

Loam.     Pp.  14. 

46.  Soils  of  the  Eastern  United  States  and  Their  Use— XXIII.     The  Orangebm-g 

Fine  Sandy  Loam.     Pp.  20. 

47.  Soils  of  the  Eastern  United  States  and  Their  Use— XXIV.     The  Orangeburg 

Sandy  Loam.     Pp.  13. 

48.  Soils  of  the  Eastern  United  States  and  Their  Use— XXV.    The  Orangeburg  Fine 

Sand.     Pp.  14. 

BUREAU   OP  BIOLOGICAL  SURVEY  CIRCULAR. 

76.  The  California  Ground  Squirrel.     Pp.  15,  figs.  4. 

OFFICE   OF  THE   SECRETARY  CIRCULAR. 

» 

31.  The  Adulteration  and  Misbranding  of  the  Seeds  of  Alfalfa,  Red  Clover,  Orchard 
Grass,  and  Kentucky  Bluegrass.    Pp.  4. 
17385°— Cir.  19—12 2 


10 

OmCB   OF  EXPERIMENT  STATIONa. 

Circ.  34  (Rev.).  Rules  and  Apparatun  for  Seed  Testing.    Pp.  24,  figs.  11. 
Doc.  687.  Utility  of  Soil  Surveye  in  the  West.     Pp.  3. 

'  Farmers'  Institute  I>ecture  No.  2.  Potato  Diseases  and  Their  Treatment.    (Syllabus 

illustrated  with  47  lantern  slides.)    Pp.  30. 
3.  Acid  Soils.     (Syllabus  illustrated  with  53  lantern 

slides.)    Pp.  28. 
6.  {Essentials  of  Successful  Field  Experimentation. 
(Syllabus  illustrated  with  32  lantern  slides.) 
Pp.  24. 
9.  Tobacco  Growing.    (Syllabus  illustrated  with  46 

lantern  slides.)    Pp.  16. 
11.  Wheat  Culture.    (Syllabus  illustrated  with  45 
lantern  slides.)    Pp.  22. 

YEARBOOK   REPRINTS. 

124.  Hybrids  and  Their  Utilization  in  Plant  Breeding.     Pp.  38,  pis.  4,  figs.  12.     (1897.) 

169.  Soil  Investigations  in  the  United  States.     Pp.  12.     (1899.) 

195.  Successful  Wheat  Growing  in  Semiarid  Districts.     Pp.  14,  pis.  4.     (1900.) 

206.  Some  Poisonous  Plants  of  the  Northern  Stock  Ranges.     Pp.  20,  pis.  3,  figs.  4. 
(1900.) 

319.  The  Industry  in  Oil  Seeds.     Pp.  16.     (1903.) 

320.  The  Relation  of  Sugar  Beets  to  General  Farming.     Pp.  12,  pis.  3. 

392.  Illustrations  of  the  Influence  of  Experiment  Station  Work  on  Culture  of  Field 

Crops.     Pp.  16,  fig.  1.     (1905.) 

393.  The  Relation  of  Irrigation  to  Dry  Farming.     Pp.  16,  pis.  2,  figs.  10.    (1905.) 
422.  Methods  of  Reducing  the  Cost  of  Producing  Beet  Sugar.     Pp.  14,  pis.  2,  figs.  2. 

(1906.) 
425.  Some  Recent  Studies  of  the  Mexican  Cotton-boll  Weevil.    Pp.  12,  pi.  1,  fig.  1. 

(1906.) 
446.  The  Art  of  Seed  Selection  and  Breeding.     Pp.  16,  pis.  5.     (1907.) 
456.  Cropping  System  for  Stock  Farms.     Pp.  14.     (1907.) 
461.  Dry-land  Farming  in  the  Great  Plains  Area.     Pp.  18,  figs.  2.     (1907.) 
488.  Some  Things  that  the  Grower  of  Cereal  and  Forage  Crops  Should  Know  About 

Insects.     Pp.  22,  pis.  3,  figs.  17.     (1908.) 

493.  By-products  of  the  Sugar  Beet  and  Their  Uses.     Pp.  10.     (1908.) 

494.  The  Development  of  Farm  Crops  Resistant  to  Disease.     Pp.  12,  pis.  2.     (1908.) 

495.  Soil  Mulches  for  Checking  Evaporation.     Pp.  8,  figs.  7.     (1908.) 
507.  The  Functions  and  Value  of  Soil  Bacteria.     Pp.  7,  figs.  2.     (1909.) 

511.  The  Future  Wheat  Supply  of  the  United  States.    Pp.  13,  figs.  2.    (1909.) 

515.  Progress  in  Methods  of  Producing  Higher  Yielding  Strains  of  Com.     Pp.  11,  pis. 

4.     (1909.) 

530.  Nitrogen-Gathering  Plants.     Pp.  8,  pis.  8.    (1910.) 

537.  Insect  Enemies  of  Tobacco  in  the  United  States.     Pp.  20,  pi.  1,  figs.  13.     (1910.) 

540.  Increased  Yields  of  Corn  from  Hybrid  Seed.     Pp.  12.    (1910.) 

541.  The  Utilization  of  Crop  Plants  in  Paper  Making.     Pp.  16,  figs.  3.    (1910.) 

■  Syllabi  of  Farmers'  Institute  Lectures  are  furnished  to  teachers  in  schools  and  college,  and  the  lantmn 
•lldes  ue  loaned  for  a  limited  time.    Express  charges  to  be  paid  both  ways.    Address  Fanners'  Institute 
Bpedalist.  OfBce  of  Experiment  Stations,  Washington,  D.  C. 
IClr.  10)  * 


11 

2.  Horttcnltiue. 

farmers'  bulletins.* 

30.  Grape  Diseases  on  the  Pacific  Coast.     Pp.  15,  figs.  3. 

61.  Asparagus  Culture.     Pp.  40,  figs.  17. 

99.  Three  Insect  Enemies  of  Shade  Trees.    Pp.  30,  figs.  11. 
104  (Rev.).    Notes  on  Frost.    Pp.  32,  figs.  4. 
113  (Rev.).    The  Apple  and  How  to  Grow  It.     Pp.  32,  figs.  10. 
118.  Grape  Growing  in  the  South.     Pp.  32,  figs.  6. 
154.  The  Home  Fruit  Grarden:  Preparation  and  Care.     Pp.  16,  figs.  6, 

156.  The  Home  Vineyard,  with  Special  Reference  to  Northern  Conditions.    Pp.  22, 

figs.  15. 

157.  The  Propagation  of  Plants.    Pp.  24,  figs.  22. 
176.  Cranberry  Culture.     Pp.  20,  figs.  12. 

178.  Insects  Injurious  in  Cranberry  Cultiu-e.     Pp.  32,  figs.  12. 

181.  Pruning.     Pp.  39,  figs.  25. 

185.  Beautifying  the  Home  Grounds.    Pp.  24,  figs.  8. 

195.  Annual  Flowering  Plants.    Pp.  48,  figs.  55. 

198.  Strawberries.     Pp.  24,  figs.  15. 

204.  The  Cultivation  of  Mushrooms.     Pp.  24,  figs.  10. 

213.  Raspberries.     Pp.  38,  figs.  25. 

220.  Tomatoes.     Pp.  32,  figs.  13. 

231.  Spraying  for  Cucumber  and  Melon  Diseases.     Pp.  24,  figs.  8. 

232.  Okra:  Its  Culture  and  Uses.     Pp.  16,  figs.  8.     (South.) 
238.  Citrus  Fruit  Growing  in  the  Gulf  States.     Pp.  48,  figs.  17. 

243.  Fungicides  and  Their  Use  in  Preventing  Diseases  of  Fruits.     Pp.  32,  figs.  17. 
248.  The  Lawn.    Pp.  20,  figs.  5. 

254.  Cucumbers.     Pp.  30,  figs.  14. 

255.  The  Home  Vegetable  Garden.     Pp.  47,  figs.  34. 

282.  Celery.    Pp.  36,  figs.  16. 

283.  Spraying  for  Apple  Diseases  and  the  Codling  Moth  in  the  Ozarks.    Pp.  42,  figs.  7, 

284.  Insect  and  Fungus  Enemies  of  the  Grape  East  of  the  Rocky  Mountains.    Pp.  48, 

figs.  35. 
307.  Roselle:  Its  Culture  and  Uses.     Pp.  16,  figs.  6. 
324.  Sweet  Potatoes.     Pp.  39,  figs.  24. 
354.  Onion  Culture.     Pp.  36,  figs.  20. 
401.  The  Protection  of  Orchards  in  the  Pacific  Northwest  from  Spring  Frosts  by 

Means  of  Fires  and  Smudges.     Pp.  24,  figs.  11. 
404.  Irrigation  of  Orchards.     Pp.  36,  figs.  32. 
407.  The  Potato  as  a  Truck  Crop.     Pp.  24. 

433.  Cabbage.    Pp.  23,  figs.  11. 

434.  The  Home  Production  of  Onion  Seed  and  Sets.     Pp.  24,  figs.  12. 

440.  Spraying  Peaches  for  the  Control  of  Brown-rot,  Scab,  and  Curculio.     Pp.  40, 

figs.  14. 
453.  Danger  of  General  Spread  of  the  Gipsy  and  Brown-tail  Moths  Through  Imported 

Nursery  Stock.     Pp.  22,  figs.  7. 
460.  Frames  as  a  Factor  in  Truck  Growing.    Pp.  29,  figs.  12. 

BUREAU   OF   BIOLOGICAL  SURVEY  CIRCULAR. 

78.  Seed-eating  Mammals  in  Relation  to  Reforestation.    Pp.  5,  figs.  3. 

1  See  also  many  bulletins  in  the  list  under  Experiment  Station  Work,  p.  22. 
(Cir.  19] 


12 

BUKBAU  OF  BNTOMOLOOT  ClftOVhkJUL 

11  (Rev.).    The  Roee-chafer.    Pp.  4,  fig.  1. 

29  (Rev.).    The  Fruit-tree  Bark-beetle.    Pp.  9,  figB.  6. 

38  (2.  Rev.).    The  Squaah-vine  Borer.     Pp.  6,  figs.  2. 

42.  How  to  Control  the  San  Joe^  Scale.    Pp.  6. 

64.  The  Peach-tree  Borer.    Pp.  6,  fig.  1. 

67.  The  Greenhoufle  White  Fly.    Pp.  9,  fig.  1. 

60.  The  Imported  Cabbage  Worm.     Pp.  8,  figB.  6. 

62  (Rev.).  The  Cabbage  Hair-worm.    Pp.  6,  fig.  1. 

64.  The  Cottony  Maple  Scale.     Pp.  6,  figs.  4. 

73.  The  Plum  Curculio.     Pp.  10,  figs.  5. 
102.  The  AaparaguB  Beetles.     Pp.  12,  figs.  7. 
104.  The  Common  Red  Spider.    Pp.  11,  figs.  4. 
106.  The  Rose  Slugis.     Pp.  12,  figs.  5. 
114.  The  Euonymus  Scale.     Pp.  5,  figs.  2. 

120.  Control  of  the  Brown-rot  and  Plum  Curculio  on  Peaches.     Pp.  7. 

121.  The  Oyster-shell  Scale  and  the  Scurfy  Scale.     Pp.  15,  figs.  2. 
124.  The  San  Jos^  Scale  and  Ita  Control.     Pp.  18,  figs,  10. 

135.  The  Asparagus  Miner.     Pp.  5,  figs.  2. 

BUREAU   OF  PLANT  INDUSTBT  DOCUMENT. 

433*  Directions  for  Making  Window  Gardens. 

YEARBOOK   REPRINTS. 

47.  Small-fruit  Culture  for  Market.    Pp.  12,  pi.  1.    (1895.) 

50.  Pear  Blight:  Its  Canse  and  Prevention.     Pp.  6.    (1895.) 

85.  Method  of  Propagating  the  Orange  and  other  Citrus  Fruita.   Pp.  18,  figs.  13.  (1896.) 
197.  How  Birds  Affect  the  Orchard.     Pp.  14,  figs.  5.    (1900.) 
261.  The  San  Jo86  Scale:  Ita  Native  Home  and  Natural  Enemy.    Pp.  20,  pis.  6, 

figs.  3.     (1902.) 
266.  Top  Working  Orchard  Trees.     Pp.  14,  pla.  4,  figs.  8.     (1902.) 
283,  330,  399,  450,  496,  521,  and  549.  Promising  New  Fruita.     (Illustrated  with  colored 

plates;  for  years  1902,  1903,  1905,  1907,  1908,  1909,  and  1910.) 
293.  The  Cultivation  and  Fertilization  of  Peach  Orchards.    Kp.  20,  pis.  6.     (1902.) 

386.  The  Principal  Insect  Enemies  of  the  Peach.    Pp.  24,  pis.  7,  figs.  7.    (1905.) 

387.  The  Handling  of  Fruit  for  Transportation.     Pp.  14,  pis.  4.  (1905.) 

388.  Meadow  Mice  in  Relation  to  Agriculture  and  Horticulture.    Pp.  14,  pla.  4,  fig.  1. 

(1905.) 
433.  Lime-sulphur  Washes  for  the  San  Jos6  Scale.    Pp.  18.    (1906.) 
452.  The  Rabbit  aa  a  Farm  and  Orchard  Pest.    Pp.  14.    (1907.) 
459.  Truck  Farming  in  the  Atlantic  Seacoaat  States.    I^.  10,  pis.  3.     (1907.) 
463.  Diaeaaes  of  Ornamental  Treea.     Pp.  12,  pis.  3,  fig.  1.     (1907.) 
480.  Information  about  Spraying  for  Orchard  Insects.     Pp.  22,  pis.  5.     (1908.) 
504.  Plants  Useful  to  Attract  Birds  and  Protect  Fruit.     Pp.  11.    (1909.) 
519.  Prevention  of  Frost  Injury  to  Fruit  Crops.     Pp.  7,  pi.  1,  fig,  1.     (1909.) 
546.  Cooperation  in  the  Marketing  and  Handling  of  Fruit.     Pp.  20.     (1910.) 

550.  The  Precooling  of  Fruit.     Pp.  16,  pis.  6.    (1910.) 

551.  Camphor  Cultivation  in  the  United  States.     Pp.  16,  pis.  3,     (1910.) 

8.   Forestry. 

farmers'  bulletins. 
99.  Three  Insect  Enemies  of  Shade  Treea.    Pp.  30,  figs.  11. 
173.  A  Primer  of  Forestry.     Part  I:  The  Foreat.     Pp.  48,  figs.  33. 
228.  Forest  Planting  and  Farm  Management.    Pp.  22,  figs.  3. 

(Cir.  10] 


13 

358.  A  Primer  of  Forestry.    Part  II:  Practical  Forestry.    Pp.  48,  figs.  25.     (See  also 

Bulletin  276  in  the  list  under  Experiment  Station  Work,  p.  23.) 
423.  Forest  Nurseries  for  Schools.    Pp.  24,  figs.  8. 
468.  Forestry  in  Nature  Study.     Pp.  43,  figs.  13. 

BUREAU   OF   BIOLOGICAL   SURVEY   CIRCULAR. 

78.  Seed-eating  Mammals  in  Relation  to  Reforestation.    Pp.  5,  figs.  3. 

FOREST  SERVICE   CIRCULARS.* 

25.  Forestry  and  the  Lumber  Supply.     Pp.  14. 

55.  How  to  Pack  and  Ship  Young  Forest  Trees.    Pp.  2,  fig.  1. 

61  (Rev.)  How  to  Transplant  Forest  Trees.     Pp.  4. 

69.  Forest  Planting  Leaflet.    Pp.  4. 

118.  Management  erf  Second  Growth  in  the  Southern  Appalachians.     Pp.  22. 
130.  Forestry  in  the  Public  Schools.     Pp.  20. 
140.  What  Forestry  Has  Done.     Pp.  32. 
157.  A  Primer  of  Conservation.    Pp.  24. 

165.  Practical  Assistance  to  Owners  of  Forest  Lands  and  to  Tree  Planters.     Pp.  7. 

166.  The  Timber  Supply  of  the  United  States.    Pp.  24,  figs.  6. 

167.  The  Status  of  Forestry.    Pp.  29. 

171.  The  Forests  of  the  United  States:  Their  Use.     Pp.  25. 
180.  Lumber  Saved  by  Using  Odd  Lengths.     Pp.  5. 

BUREAU   OF    ENTOMOLOGY  CIRCULARS. 

64.  The  Cottony  Maple  Scale.     Pp.  6,  figs.  4. 

99.  The  Nut  WeevUs.     Pp.  15,  figs.  14. 
125.  Insects  which  Kill  Forest  Trees:  Character  and  Extent  of  Their  Depredations 

and  Methods  of  Control.     Pp.  9. 
130.  The  Oak  Pruner.     Pp.  7,  fig.  1. 

YEARBOOK   REPRINTS. 

112.  Trees  of  the  United  States  Important  in  Forestry.     Pp.  26.     (1897.) 

268.  Some  of  the  Principal  Insect  Enemies  of  Coniferous  Forests  in  the  United  States. 

Pp.  18,  pis.  2,  figs.  10.     (1902.) 
270    Practicability  of  Forest  Planting  in  the  United  States.     Pp.  12,  pis.  4.     (1902.) 
274.  Influence  of  Forestry  upon  the  Lumber  Industry.     Pp.  3,  pis.  3.     (1902.) 
327.  Insect  Injuries  to  Hardwood  Forest  Trees.     Pp.  16,  figs.  17.     (1903.) 
329.  The  Relation  of  Forests  to  Stream  Flow.     Pp.  10.     (1903.) 
355.  Insect  Injuries  to  Forest  Products.     Pp.  18,  figs.  14.     (1904.) 
376.  How  to  Grow  Young  Trees  for  Forest  Planting.     Pp.  10,  pi.  1,  fig.  1.     (1905.) 
381.  Insect  Enemies  of  Forest  Reproduction.    Pp.  8,  figs.  9.     (1905.) 
434.  National  Forests  and  the  Lumber  Supply.     Pp.  6.     (1906.) 
442.  Notable  Depredations  by  Forest  Insects.     Pp.  16.     (1907.) 
463.  Diseases  of  Ornamental  Trees.     Pp.  12,  Pis.  3,  fig.  1.     (1907.) 
466.  Cutting  Timber  on  the  National  Forests  and  Providing  for  a  Future  Supply. 

Pp.  12,  pis.  3.     (1907.) 
470.  Progress  in  Forestry  in  1907.     Pp.  12,  pis.  2.     (1907.) 
506.  Pocket  Gophers  as  Enemies  of  Trees.     Pp.  9,  pis.  2,  fig.  1.     (1909.) 
523.  Injuries  to  Forest  Trees  by  Flat-headed  Borers.    Pp.  6,  figs.  12.     (1909.) 
525.  The  Management  of  Second-growth  Sprout  Forests.     Pp.  16,  pis.  2.     (1910.) 
534.  Progress  in  Saving  Forest  Waste.     Pp.  16,  pis.  3.     (1910.) 
542.  Injuries  to  Forests  and  Forest  Products  by  Round-headed  Borers.     Pp.  20,  figs. 

12.     (1910.) 
548.  Fire  Prevention  and  Control  in  the  National  Forests.    Pp.  16,  pis.  6.    (1910.)^"* 

i  Circtilars  dealing  with  the  more  important  forest  trees  may  be  had  by  writing  the  Forest  Service,  U. 
S.  Department  of  Agricoltiu-e,  Washington,  D.  C. 
IClr.  19) 


14 

III.  ANIMAL  PRODUCTION. 
1.  Farm  Aninuls. 

FARMBRS'   BULLETINS.* 

22  (Rev.).  The  Feeding  of  Farm  Animab.    Pp.  40. 
49.  Sheep  Feeding.     Pp.  24. 

71.  Easentials  in  Beef  Production.    Pp.  24,  figs.  17. 

96.  Raising  Sheep  for  Mutton.    Pp.  48,  figs.  18. 
137  (Rev.).  The  Angora  Goat.    Pp.  48,  figs.  7. 
152  (Rev.).  Scabies  of  Cattle.    Pp.  32,  figs.  15. 
170,  Principles  of  Horse  Feeding.    Pp.  44. 

205  (Rev.).  Pig  Management.     Pp.  40,  figs.  22. 

206.  Milk  Fever  and  Its  Treatment.     Pp.  16,  figa.  2. 

258.  Texas  or  Tick  Fever  and  Its  Prevention.     Pp.  45,  figs.  6.     (South.) 

346.  The  Computation  of  Rations  for  Farm  Animals  by  the  Use  of  Energy  Values. 

Pp.  32. 
350.  The  Dehorning  of  Cattle.    Pp.  14,  figs.  6. 
361.  The  Tuberculin  Teat  of  Cattle  for  Tuberculosis.    Pp.  8. 

378.  Methods  of  Exterminating  the  Texas  Fever  Tick.    Pp.  30. 

379.  Hog  Cholera.     Pp.  23,  figs.  3. 

380.  The  Loco-weed  Disease.     Pp.  16. 

411.  Feeding  Hogs  in  the  South.     Pp.  47,  figs.  9. 

438.  Hog  Houses.     Pp.  25,  figs.  21. 

439.  Anthrax  with  Special  Reference  to  Its  Suppression.    Pp.  16. 

BUBEAU  OF  ANIMAL  INDUSTRY  CIRCULARS. 

23  (3.  Rev.).  Directions  for  the  Use  of  Blackly  Vaccine.    Pp.  8,  figs.  3. 
31  (3.  Rev.).  Blackleg:  Its  Nature,  Cause,  and  Prevention.     Pp.  24,  fig.  1, 
41.  A  Form  of  Hog  Cholera  Not  Caused  by  the  Hog-cholera  Bacillus.     Pp.  4. 
63.  A  Review  of  Some  Experimental  Work  in  Pig  Feeding.     Pp.  49. 

68  (Rev.).  Diseases  of  the  Stomach  and  Bowels  of  Cattle.     Pp.  10. 

78.  Glanders  and  Farcy.     Pp.  12. 

81.  The  Sheep  Industry  of  England,  Scotland,  Ireland,  and  France.     Pp,  17. 

87.  Hunter-horse  Production  in  Ireland.     Pp.  37,  pis.  8. 

89.  The  Preparation  of  Emulsions  of  Crude  Petroleum  (for  cattle  parasites).     Pp.  4. 

94.  Foot-rot  of  Sheep.    Pp.  20,  fig.  1, 

97.  How  to  Get  Rid  of  Cattle  Ticks.     Pp.  4,  fig.  1.     (South.) 

98.  Some  Unusual  Host  Relations  of  the  Texas  Fever  Tick,    Pp,  8. 
102.  Stomach  Worms  in  Sheep.     Pp.  7. 

105.  Baby  Beef.     Pp.  105,  pi.  1,  figs.  5, 

113.  Classification  of  American  Carriage  Horses.    Pp.  4, 

124.  Suggestions  for  Horse  and  Mule  Raising  in  the  South.     Pp.  15. 

125.  The  Federal  Meat-inspection  Service.     Pp.  140,  pis.  15,  fig.  1. 
129.  Rabies  and  Its  Increasing  Prevalence.     Pp.  26,  fig.  1. 

137.  The  Preservation  of  Our  Native  Types  of  Horses.     Pp.  59,  pi.  1,  figs.  19. 

138.  Infectious  Anemia  or  Swamp  Fever  of  Horses.     Pp.  4. 
141,  Foot-and-mouth  Disease,     Pp.  8. 

144.  Tuberculosis  of  Hogs:  Its  Cause  and  Suppression.     Pp.  32,  pis.  4. 

>  See  also  Bulletins  107, 119, 144, 222,  22S,  244, 251, 273, 316, 366, 881,  and  461  in  tbe  list  under  Experimeat 
Btation  Work,  pp,  2»-26. 
ICir.  19) 


15 

157.  The  Prevention  of  Losses  among  Sheep  from  Stomach  Worms.     Pp.  10. 

163.  The  Regeneration  of  the  Morgan  Horse.     Pp.  14,  figs.  2. 

165.  Methods  for  the  Eradication  of  Gid.     Pp.  29,  figs.  14. 

168.  A  Note  on  the  Feeding  Value  of  Coconut  and  Peanut  Meals  for  Horses.     Pp.  2. 

174.  Eradicating  Cattle  Ticks  in  California.     Pp.  17. 

175.  The  Control  of  Bovine  Tuberculosis.     Pp.  27. 

178.  Breeding  Horses  for  the  United  States  Army.    Pp.  13. 

BUREAU   OF  PLANT  INDUSTRY  CIRCULARS. 

45.  The  Utilization  of  Pea-cannery  Refuse  for  Forage.     Pp.  12,  figs.  3. 

74.  The  Sulphur  Bleaching  of  Commercial  Oats  and  Barley.     Pp.  13,  figs.  4. 

BUREAU   OF   ENTOMOLOGY   CIRCULARS. 

25  (Second  Series).  The  Ox  Warble.    Pp.  10,  figs.  10. 
15.  The  Horn  Fly.     Pp.  13,  figs.  6. 

OFFICE   OP  THE   SECRETARY  CIRCULAR. 

30.  Hog  Raising  in  the  South.    Pp.  8,  fig.  1. 

OFFICE   OF   EXPERIMENT   STATIONS. 

Circ.  100.  A  Secondary  Course  in  Animal  Production.     Pp.  56. 
*  Farmers'  Institute  Lecture  No.  4.    Profitable  Cattle  Feeding.     (Syllabus  illustrated 
with  45  lantern  slides.)    Pp.  21. 

YEARBOOK   REPRINTS. 

15.  Some  Practical  Suggestions  for  the  Suppression  and  Prevention  of  Bovine  Tuber- 
culosis.    Pp.  14.     (1894.) 

206.  Some  Poisonous  Plants  of  the  Northern  Stock  Ranges.  Pp.  20,  pis.  3,  figs.  4. 
(1900.) 

241.  Grazing  in  the  Forest  Reserves.     Pp.  16,  pis.  8.     (1901.) 

456.  Cropping  System  for  Stock  Farms.     Pp.  14.     (1907.) 

484.  Recent  Work  of  the  Bureau  of  Animal  Industry  Concerning  the  Cause  and  Pre- 
vention of  Hog  Cholera.     Pp.  12.     (1908.) 

531.  Some  of  the  More  Important  Ticks  of  the  United  States.     Pp.  16,  pis.  2.     (1910.) 

2.  Poultry. 

farmers'   BULLETINS.' 

51  (Rev.).  Standard  Varieties  of  Chickens.     Pp.  48,  figs.  42. 

64  (Rev.).  Ducks  and  Geese.    Pp.  55,  figs.  37. 
177  (Rev.).  Squab  Raising.     Pp.  32,  figs.  11. 
200.  Turkeys.     Pp.  40,  figs.  12. 
234.  The  Guinea  Fowl.     Pp.  24,  figs.  3. 
236.  Incubation  and  Incubators.     Pp.  32,  figs.  11. 
287.  Poultry  Management.     Pp.  48,  figs.  14. 
355.  A  Successful  Poultry  and  Dairy  Farm.     Pp.  40,  figs.  7. 
357.  Methods  of  Poultry  Management  at  the  Maine  Agricultural  Experiment  Station. 

Pp.  39,  figs.  10. 
445.  Marketing  Eggs  through  the  Creamery.    Pp.  12. 

'  See  footnote,  p.  10. 

*  See  also  many  of  the  bulletins  in  the  list  under  Experiment  Station  Work,  p.  22. 
(Clr.  19] 


16 

BTTRSAU  OF  ANIMAL  IKDU8TRT  OIROtTLARS. 

64.  A  New  Nematode  Paraaite  in  the  Crop  of  Chickens.     Pp.  3,  figs.  2. 
128.  White  Diarrhea  of  Chicks  With  Notes  on  Coccidiosis  in  Birds.     Pp.  7. 

BUREAU   OF  ENTOMOLOOY  CIRCULAR. 

02.  Mitea  and  Lice  on  Poultry.    Pp.  8,  figs.  6. 

BUREAU   OF  CHEMISTRY   CIRCUIiAR. 

61.  How  to  Ol  and  Bleed  Market  Poultry.     Pp.  15,  figs.  5. 

OFFICE   OF   EXPERIMENT  STATIONS  CIRCULAR. 

100.  A  Secondary  Course  in  Animal  Production.    Pp.  56. 

YEARBOOK   REPRINTS. 

468.  Changes  Taking  Place  in  Chickens  in  Cold  Storage.    Pp.  9,  pis.  7.    (1907.) 
652.  The  Effect  of  the  Present  Method  of  Handling  Eggs  on  the  Industry  and  the 
Product.     Pp.  20,  pi.  1.     (1910.) 

IV.  AGRICULTURAL   TECHNOLOGY. 

1.  Dairying. 

farmers'    BULLETINS. 

55  (Rev.).     The  Dairy  Herd.     Pp.  30. 
106.  Breeds  of  Dairy  Cattle.     Pp.  48,  figs.  21. 
166.  Cheese  Making  on  the  Farm.     Pp.  16,  figs.  3. 
201.  The  Cream  Separator  on  Western  Farms.     Pp.  23. 
280.  A  Profitable  Tenant  Dairy  Farm.     Pp.  16,  figa.  3. 
337.  Cropping  Systems  for  New  England  Dairy  Farms.     Pp.  24,  figs.  2. 
349.  The  Dairy  Industry  in  the  South.     Pp.  37,  figs.  10. 
355.  A  Successful  Poultry  and  Dairy  Farm.     Pp.  40,  figs.  7. 
413.  The  Care  of  Milk  and  Its  Use  in  the  Home.     Pp.  20. 
445.  Marketing  Eggs  Through  the  Creamery.     Pp.  12. 

BUREAU   OF  ANIMAL  INDUSTRY  CIRCULARS. 

118.  The  Unsuspected  but  Dangerously  Tuberculous  Cow.    Pp.  19,  figs.  7. 
126.  A  Simple  Method  of  Keeping  Creamery  Records.     Pp.  12. 
130.  Paraffining  Butter  Tubs.     Pp.  6,  fig.  1. 

142.  Some  Important  Factors  in  the  Production  of  Sanitary  Milk.     Pp.  18,  figs.  12. 

143.  Milk  and  Its  Products  as  Carriers  of  Tuberculosis  Infection.     Pp.  7. 
153.  The  Dissemination  of  Disease  by  Dairy  Products.     Pp.  57,  figs.  11. 

158.  Improved  Methods  for  the  Production  of  Market  Milk  by  Ordinary  Dairies.     Pp. 

12,  figb.  11. 
161.  Whey  Butter.     Pp.  7. 
166.  The  Digestibility  of  Cheese.     Pp.  22. 

170.  The  Extra  Cost  of  Producing  Clean  Milk.     Pp.  12,  pla.  4,  fig.  L 
175.  The  Control  of  Bovine  Tuberculoeis.    Pp.  27. 
(Ctr.  ig] 


17 


OFFICE    OF    EXPERIMENT   STATIONS. 

Circ.  100.  A  Secondary  Course  in  Animal  Production.     Pp.  56. 
'  Farmers'  Institute  Lecture  No.  1.    The  Care  of  Milk.     (Syllabus  illustrated  with  44 
lantern  elides.)     Pp.  12. 

YEARBOOK    REPRINTS. 

94.  utilization  of  By-products  of  the  Dairy.     Pp.  20.     (1897.) 
260.  Dairying  at  Home  and  Abroad.     Pp.  10,  pis.  6.     (1902.) 
532.  The  Eradication  of  Cattle  Tuberculosis  in  the  District  of  Columbia.     Pp  16. 

(1910.) 
536.  The  Grading  of  Cream.     Pp.  8.     (1910.) 

2.  Miscellaneous. 

farmers'    BULLETINS.'* 

36.  Cotton  Seed  and  Its  Products.     Pp.  16. 

135.  Sorghum  Sirup  Manufacture.     Pp.  40,  figs.  26. 
252.  Maple  Sugar  and  Sirup.     Pp.  36,  figs.  9.     (North.) 

268.  Industrial  Alcohol:  Sources  and  Manufacture.     Pp.  45,  figs.  10. 
410.  Potato  Culls  as  a  Source  of  Industrial  Alcohol.     Pp.  40,  figs.  10. 

YEARBOOK   REPRINTS. 

282.  Flaxseed  Production,  Commerce,  and  Manufacture  in  the  United  States.     Pp. 

18.     (1902.) 
319.  The  Industry  in  Oil  Seeds.     Pp.  16.     (1903.) 
534.  Progress  in  Saving  Forest  Waste.     Pp.  16,  pis.  3.     (1910.) 
541.  The  Utilization  of  Crop  Plants  in  Paper  Making.     Pp.  16,  figs.  3.     (1910.) 

V.  AGRICULTURAL   ENGINEERING. 
1.  Farm  Buildings. 

farmers'    BULLETINS.' 

32  (Rev.).     Silos  and  Silage.     Pp.  30,  figs.  6. 
126.  Practical  Suggestions  for  Farm  Buildings.     Pp.  48,  figs.  28. 
270.  Modem  Conveniences  for  tlie  Farm  Home.     Pp.  48,  figs.  26. 
367.  Lightning  and  Lightning  Conductors.     Pp.  20,  figs.  3. 
43S.  Hog  Houses.     Pp.  29,  figs.  21. 
475.  Ice  Houses. 

BUREAU   OF   ANIMAL   INDUSTRY   CIRCULARS. 

131.  Designs  for  Dairy  Buildings.     Pp.  26,  figs.  32. 

136.  How  to  Build  a  Stave  Silo.     Pp.  18,  figs.  18. 

FORE.ST    SERVICE    CIRCULAR. 

180.  Lumber  Saved  by  U.sing  Odd  Lengths.     Pp.  5. 

OFFICE   OF   EXPERIMENT   STATIONS   FARMERS'    INSTITUTE    LECTURES.^ 

5.  Silage  and  Silo  Construction  for  the  South.     (Syllabus  illustrated  with  50  lan- 
tern slides.)     Pp.  31. 
8.  Farm  Architecture.     (Syllabu.-  illustrated  with  45  lantern  slides.)     Pp.  19. 

'  See  footnote,  p.  10. 

2  See  also  Bulletins  119  and  124  in  the  list  under  Experiment  Station  Work,  p.  22. 

»  See  also  Bulletins  149, 190,  22o,  244,  and  317  in  the  Ust  under  Experiment  Station  Work,  pp.  24.  25. 

<  See  footnote,  p.  10. 

17385°- Cir.  19—12 3 


18 

8.  Tann  Mechanics. 

farmekr'  bulletins.' 

150.  ClearinR  New  T^nd.     Pp.  24,  figs.  7. 

179.  Ilorw^shoing.     Pp.  30,  figs.  18. 

23.').  Proparation  of  Cement  Concrete.     Pp.  32,  fign.  14. 

269.  Industrial  Alcohol:  UhCH  and  StatisticH.     Pp.  29,  figa.  10. 

277.  The  Uae  of  Alcohol  and  Gasoline  in  Farm  Engines.     Pp.  40,  figs.  12. 

303.  Corn-harvesting  Machinery.     Pp.  32,  fig?.  20. 

347.  The  Repair  of  Farm  Equipment.     Pp.  32,  figs.  23. 

387.  Pre.servative  Treatment  of  Farm  Timbers.     Pp.  19,  figs.  6. 

403.  The  Construction  of  Concrete  Fence  Poata.     Pp.  31,  figs.  9. 

474.  The  Use  of  Paint  on  the  Farm.    PV-  21,  fig.  1. 

BUREAU   OF   ENTOMOLOOY  CIRCULARS. 

55    Powder-poBt  Injury  to  Sea-soned  Wood  Products.     Pp.  5,  fig.  1. 
134.  Damage  to  Telephone  and  Telegraph  Poles  by  Wood-boring   InsectB.     Pp.  G. 
fig.  3.  I 

FOREST  SERVICE  CIRCULAHfl. 

39.  Experiments  in  the  Strength  of  Treated  Timber.     Pp.  31,  fig.^.  2. 
69.  Fence-post  Trees.     Pp.4. 
142.  Tests  of  Vehicle  and  Implement  Woods.     Pp.  29. 

BUREAU   OF   PLANT   INDUSTRY   CIRCULAR. 

44.  Minor  Articles  of  Farm  Equipment.     Pp.  15. 

OFFICE   OF  EXPERIMENT   STATIONS  CIRCULAR. 

74.  Excavating  Machinery  Used  for  Digging  Ditches  and  Building  Levees.     Pp.  40. 

figs.  16. 

YEARBOOK   REPRINTS. 

457.  Hygienic  Water  Supplies  for  Farms.     Pp.  10,  pi.  1,  figs.  4.     (1907.) 

518.  Comforts  and  Conveniences  in  Farmers'  Homes.      Pp.  11,  figs.  6.     (1909.) 

8.  Boad  ImproTement. 

farmers'    BULLETINS. 

311.  Sand-clay  and  Burnt-clay  Roads.     Pp.  19,  figs.  5. 

321.  The  Use  of  the  Split-log  Drag  on  Earth  Roads.     Pp.  14,  figs.  5. 

338.  Macadam  Roads.    Pp.  39,  figs.  10. 

office   of  PUBLIC   ROADS   CIRCULARS, 

37.  The  Railroads  and  the  Wagon  Roads.     Pp.  4. 

89.  Progress  Reports  of  Experiments  with  Dust  Preventives.     Pp.  26. 

90.  Progress  Reports  of  Experiments  in  Dust  Prevention,  Road  Preservation,  and 

Road  Construction.     Pp.  23. 

91.  Sand-clay  and  Earth  Roads  in  the  Middle  West.     Pp.  31,  figs.  6. 

92.  Progress  Reports  of  Experiments  in  Dust  Prevention  and  Road  Preservation. 

Pp.  32. 

«  See  also  Bulletins  149, 353,  and  381  In  the  list  under  Experiment  Station  Work,  pp.  23, 24. 
IClr.  19) 


19 


OFFICE    OF   EXPERIMENT    STATIONS. 


1  Farmers'  Institute  Lecture  No.  7.     Roads  and  Road  Building.     (Syllabus  illustrated 
with  41  lantern  slides.)     Pp.  16. 


YEARBOOK   REPRINTS. 


149.  Steel-track  Wagon  Roads.     Pp.  6,  pis.  3,  fig.  1.     (1898.) 

240.  Road  Building  with  Convict  Labor  in  the  Southern  States.     Pp.  14,  pis.  5. 

(1901.) 
245.  Government  Cooperation  in  Object-lesson  Road  Work.     Pp.  6,  pis.  2.     (1901.) 
296.  Use  of  Mineral  Oil  in  Road  Improvement.     Pp.  16,  pis.  3,  figs.  4.     (1902.) 
332.  Building  Sand-clay  Roads  in  Southern  States.     Pp.  8,  pis.  2,  figs.  3.     (1903.) 
407.  Progress  of  Road  Legislation  and  Road  Improvement  in  the  Different  States. 

Pp.  4.     (1905.) 
412.  Object-lesson  Roads.     Pp.  10,  pis.  4.     (1906.) 
448.  Dust  Preventives.     Pp.  10,  pis.  4.     (1907.) 

535.  Progress  and  Present  Status  of  the  Good  Roads  Movement.     Pp.  12.     (1910.) 
538.  Bituminous  Dust  Preventives  and  Road  Binders.     Pp.  12.     (1910.) 

4.  Drainage. 

farmers'    BULLETINS. 

187.  Drainage  of  Farm  Lands.     Pp.  38,  figs.  19. 
371.  Drainage  of  Irrigated  Lands.     Pp.  52,  figs.  19. 

OFFrCE    OF   EXPERIMENT   STATIONS. 

Sep.  9,  Bulletin  158.     Report  of  Drainage  Investigations,  1904.     Pp.  100,  pis.  4, 

figs.  52. 
Circ.  74.  Excavating  Machinery  Used  for  Digging  Ditches  and  Building  Levees.     Pp. 

40,  figs.  16. 
Doc.  723.  Irrigation  and  Drainage  Investigations  of  the  Office  of  Experiment  Stations. 

Pp.  23,  pis.  2,  figs.  5. 
Doc.  1028.  Reclamation  of  Tide  Lands.     Pp.  24,  pis.  5',  figs.  6. 
Doc.  1136.  Progress  in  Drainage  (1907).     Pp.  18. 
Doc.  1222.  The  Alluvial  Lands  of  the  Lower  Mississippi  Valley  and  Their  Drainage. 

Pp.  10,  pis.  2,  figs.  2. 

5.  Irrigation. 

farmers'    BULLETINS. '^ 

138.  Irrigation  in  Field  and  Garden.     Pp.  40,  figs.  18. 

158.  How  to  Build  Small  Irrigating  Ditches.     Pp.  28,  figs.  9. 

263.  Practical  Information  for  Beginners  in  Irrigation.     Pp.  40,  figs.  25, 

371.  Drainage  of  Irrigated  Lands.     Pp.  52,  figs.  19. 

373.  Irrigation  of  Alfalfa.     Pp.  48,  figs.  32. 

OFFICE    OF    EXPERIMENT   STATIONS    DOCUMENTS. 

369.  The  Use  of  Water  in  Irrigation.     Pp.  82,  pis.  25,  figs.  13. 

723.  Irrigation  and  Drainage  Investigations  of  the  Office  of  Experiment   Stations. 
Pp.  23,  pis.  2,  figs.  5. 


'  See  footnote,  p.  lo. 

^  See  also  Bulletin  317  in  the  list  under  Experiment  Station  Work,  p.  24. 


|Cir.  lyj 


20 


YEARBOOK   REPBINT8. 

S93.  The  Relation  of  Irrigation  to  Dry  Farming.     Pp.  16,  pl«.  2,  fipc  10. 
458.  The  Use  of  Small  Water  Supplies  for  Irrigation.     Pp.  l«,  figs.  G. 
495.  Soil  Mulches  for  Checking  Evaporation.     Pp.  8,  (igs.  7. 
514.  Methods  of  Applying  Water  to  Crops*.     Pp.  IG.  pi.  1,  figs.  10. 
62({.  The  Agricultural  Duty  of  Water.    Pp.  12.    (1910.) 

VI.  AGRICULTURAL  ECCNOMICS. 
farmers'  bulletins.' 

62.  Marketing  Farm  Produce.     Pp.  31,  figs.  17. 

228.  Forest  Planting  and  Farm  Management.     Pp.  22,  figs.  3. 

229.  The  Production  of  Good  Seed  Corn.     Pp.  23,  figs.  10. 
242.  An  Example  of  Model  Farming.     Pp.  16,  figs.  5. 

272.  A  Successful  Hog  and  Seed-corn  Farm.     Pp.  16,  figs.  5. 

280.  A  Profitable  Tenant  Dairy  Farm.     Pp.  16,  figs.  3. 

294.  Farm  Practice  in  the  Columbia  Basin  Uplands.     Pp.  30,  fig?.  9. 

299.  Diversified  Farming  under  the  Plantation  System.     Pp.  14. 

310.  A  Successful  Alabama  Diversification  Farm.     Pp.  24,  figs.  4. 

312.  A  Successful  Southern  Hay  Farm.     Pp.  15. 

319.  Demonstration  Work  in  Cooperation  with  Southern  Farmers.     Pp.  22. 

325.  Small  Farms  in  the  Com  Belt.     Pp.  29,  figs.  3. 

326.  Building  Up  a  Run-down  Cotton  Plantation.     Pp.  22,  figs.  9. 
337.  Cropping  Systems  for  New  England  Dairy  Farms.     Pp.  24,  figs.  2. 
355.  A  Successful  Poultry  and  Dairy  Farm.     Pp.  40,  (igs.  7. 

362.  Conditions  Affecting  the  Value  of  Market  Hay.     Pp.  29,  figs.  7. 

364.  A  Profitable  Cotton  Farm.     Pp.  23,  figs.  12. 

365.  Potato  Growing  in  Northern  Sections.     Pp.  31,  figs.  11. 
370.  Replanning  a  Farm  for  Profit.     Pp.  36. 

432.  How  a  City  Family  Managed  a  Farm.     Pp.  28,  figs.  7. 
437.  A  System  of  Tenant  Farming  and  Its  Results.     Pp.  20. 
454.  A  Successful  New  York  Farm.     Pp.  32,  figs.  9. 
460.  Frames  as  a  Factor  in  Truck  Growing.     Pp.  29,  figs.  12. 

462.  The  Utilization  of  Logged-off  Land  for  Pastures  in  Western  Oregon  and  Western 
Washington.     Pp.  20,  figs.  5. 

BUREAU   OF   ANIMAL   INDUSTRY   CIRCULARS. 

56.  Facta  Concerning  the  History,  Commerce,  and  Manufacture  of  Butter.     Pp.  24. 
103.  Records  of  Dairy  Cows:  Their  Value  and  Importance  in  Econonuc  Milk  Produc- 
tion.    Pp.  38,  figs.  10. 
140.  The  Egg  Trade  of  the  United  States.     Pp.  34,  figs.  2. 
178.  Breeding  Horses  for  the  United  States  Army.     Pp.  13. 

BUREAU    OF   PLANT   INDUSTRY   CIRCULARS. 

25.  The  Cost  of  Clearing  Logged-off  Land  for  Farming  in  the  Pacific  Northwest.     Pp. 

16,  figs.  9. 
75.  Agricultural  Survey  of  Four  Townships  in  Southern  New  Hamijshire.     Pp.  19, 

figs.  3. 

BUREAU    OF   STATISTICS   CIRCULARS. 

3.  The  Farmers'  Interest  in  Finance.     Pp.  15,  figs.  2. 
17.  Government  Crop  Reports:  Their  Value,  Scope,  and  Preparation.     Pp.  10. 


>  See  also  Bulletins  114  and  190  in  the  list  under  Experiment  Station  Work,  pp.  23, 23. 
ICir.  19J 


21 

BT7BEAT7  OP  ENTOMOLOGY  CIBOTTI<All. 

129.  Insects  in  Their  Relation  to  thvj  Reduction  of  Future  Supplies  of  Timber,  and 
General  Principles  of  C!ontrol.     Pp.  10. 

OFFICE   OF  THE   SECRETARY  CIRCULARS. 

25.  The  Unproductive  Farm.     Pp.  8. 

32.  Cotton,  the  Greatest  of  Cash  Crops.     Pp.  10. 

OFFICE   OF  PUBLIC   ROADS  CIRCULARS. 

27.  Cost  of  Hauling  Farm  Products  to  Market  or  to  Shipping  Points  in  European 

Countries.     Pp.  12. 
37.  The  Railroads  and  the  Wagon  Roads.     Pp.  4. 

YEARBOOK  REPRINTS. 

122.  Agricultural  Production  and  Prices.     Pp.  30.     (1897.) 

256.  Wheat  Ports  of  the  Pacific  Coast.     Pp.  14,  pis.  5.     (1901.) 

304.  The  Nation's  Farm  Surplus.     Pp.  12.     (1903.) 

308.  Consumption  of  Cotton  in  the  Cotton  States.     Pp.  15,  pis.  3,  fig.  1.     (1903.) 

309.  The  Economic  Value  of  the  Bobwhite.     Pp.  12,  pi.  1.    (1903.) 
319.  The  Industry  in  Oil  Seeds.     Pp.  16.     (1903.) 

340.  Opportunities  in  Agriculture.     Pp.  30,  pis.  3.     (1904.) 

422.  Methods  of  Reducing  the  Cost  of  Producing  Beet  Sugar.     Pp.  14,  pis.  2,  figs.  2. 

(1906.) 
430.  Freight  Costs  and  Market  Values.     Pp.  16.     (1906.) 
443.  Does  it  Pay  the  Farmer  to  Protect  Birds?    Pp.  14,  pis.  4.     (1907.) 
447.  The  Value  of  Insect  Parasitism  to  the  American  Farmer.     Pp.  20,  figs.  24.     (1907.) 
456.  Cropping  System  for  Stock  Farms.     Pp.  14.     (1907.) 
466.  Cutting  Timber  on  the  National  Forests  and  Providing  for  a  Future  Supply.     Pp. 

12,  pis.  3.     (1907.) 

474.  The  Economic  Value  of  Predaceous  Birds  and  Mammals.     Pp.  8,  pis.  3.     (1908.) 

475.  The  Wastes  of  the  Farm.     Pp.20.     (1908.) 

483.  The  Causes  of  Southern  Rural  Conditions,  and  the  Small  Farm  as  an  Important 

Remedy.     Pp.  10.     (1908.) 
487.  Types  of  Farming  in  the  United  States.     Pp.  15.     (1908.) 
502.  Methods  and  Costs  of  Marketing.     Pp.  14.     (1909.) 
509.  Farming  as  an  Occupation  for  City-bred  Men.    Pp.  9.     (1909.) 

511.  The  Future  Wheat  Supply  of  the  United  States.     Pp.  13,  figs.  2.     (1909.) 

512.  Vegetable-seed  Growing  as  a  Business.     Pp.  11,  pis.  2.     (1909.) 

525.  The  Management  of  Second  Growth  Sprout  Forests.     Pp.  11.     (1910.) 

528.  Supply  and  Wages  of  Farm  Labor.     Pp.  16.     (1910.) 

533.  The  Game  Market  of  To-day.     Pp.  16,  figs.  2.     (1910.) 

546.  Cooperation  in  the  Marketing  and  Handling  of  Fruit.     Pp.  20.     (1910.) 

552.  The  Effect  of  the  Present  Method  of  Handling  Eggs  on  the  Industry  and  the 

Product.     Pp.  20,  pi.  1.     (1910.) 

553.  Agricultural  Statistics.    Pp.  212.     (1910.) 

(Agricultural  statictics  of  crop  and  animal  products  are  published  for  each 
year  and  may  be  had  on  application  to  the  Secretary  of  Agriculture.) 
[Cir.  1»] 


VII.  GENERAL  AND  SPECIAL  TOPICS. 

rARMKBS'    BULLBTINt. 

54  (Rev.).  Some  Common  Birds.     Pp.  48,  figa.  22. 
59  (Rev.).  Bee  Keeping.     Pp.  47,  figs.  19. 

86.  Thirty  Poisonous  Plants.     Pp.  32,  figs.  24. 

127  (Rev.).  Important  Insecticides.     Pp.  45,  figs.  6. 
174.  Broom  C!om.     Pp.  30,  figs.  10. 

183.  Meat  on  the  Farm.  Butchering,  Curing,  and  Keeping.    Pp.  87,  figs.  85. 
188.  Weeds  Used  in  Medicine.     Pp.  45,  figs.  31. 
194.  AlfaMa  Seed.    Pp.  14,  figs.  55. 
196.  Usefulness  of  the  American  Toad.    Pp.  16. 
301.  Home-grown  Tea.    Pp.  16,  figs.  4. 
315.  Progress  in  Legume  Inoculation.    Pp.  20. 

319.  Demonstration  Work  in  Coop>eration  with  Southern  Farmers.     Pp.  22. 
328.  Silver  Fox  Farming.     Pp.  22,  figs.  10. 
330.  Deer  Farming  in  the  United  States.     Pp.  20,  figs.  2. 
369.  How  to  Destroy  Rats.     Pp.  20,  figs.  5. 
377.  Harmfulness  of  Headache  Mixtures.     Pp.  16. 

393.  Habit-forming  Agents:  Their  Indiscriminate  Sale  and  Use  a  Menace  to  Public 
Welfare.     Pp.  19,  figs.  5. 

EXPERIMENT  STATION   WORK.^ 

78.  Humus  in  soils — ^Winter  protection  of  pleach  trees — Sunflowers — Grape  juice  and 

sweet  cider,  etc.    Pp.  32,  figs.  2. 
84.  Home-mixed  fertilizers — Field  selection  of  seed — Potatoes  as  food — By-product 

of  the  dairy — Gape  disease  of  chickens,  etc.    Pp.  32,  figs.  8. 

87.  Soil  moisture  and  fertility — Cultivating  v.  cropping  orchards — Transplanting 

trees — Food  value  of  eggs — The  toad  as  the  farmer's  friend,  etc.    Pp.  32, 

figs.  6. 
92.  Sugar  beets  on  alkali  soils — Replanting  com — Improved  culture  of  potatoes — 

Second-crop  seed  potatoes — Pasteurization  of  milk  for  butter  making,  etc. 

Pp.  30. 
105.  The  tillering  of  grains — Fertilizers  for  gardens — Cereal  breakfast  foods — When  to 

cut  alfalfa — Spontaneous  combustion  of  hay,  etc.     Pp.  32,  figs.  4. 
107.  Fertilizer  requirements  for  crops — Cost  of  raising  calves — Feeding  tuberculous 

milk  to  calves — Killing  the  germs  of  tuberculosis  in  milk — Dairy  salt,  etc. 

Pp.  32,  figs.  3. 
114.  Influence  of  salt  on  soil  moisture — Extra  early  potatoes — Low-grade  Paris  green — 

Skim  milk  in  bread  making — Profitable  and  unprofitable  cows,  etc.     Pp.  28, 

figs.  5. 
119.  Storing  apples  without  ice — Cold  storage  on  the  farm — Transplanting  musk- 
melons — Effect  of  cotton-seed  meal  on  the  quality  of  butter — Protection 

against  Texas  fever,  etc.     Pp.  31,  figs.  5. 
122.  Lining  grass  lands — Nuts  as  food — A  pure-food  law — Selling  egga  by  weight — 

Unfermented  grape  juice,  etc.     Pp.  32,  figs.  5. 
124.  Distilled  drinking  water — Lime  as  a  fertilizer — ^Weed  destruction — Maple  sirup 

and  sugar — Type  of  the  dairy  cow,  etc.     Pp.  32,  figs.  6. 

>  ExperimoDt  Station  Work  is  a  sabseries  of  Farmers'  Bulletins  compiled  from  the  pablished  reports  of 
the  agricuftoral  experiment  stations  and  kindred  institntions  in  this  and  other  countries.     In  sending  for 
bulletins  of  this  series  simply  ask  for  Farmers'  Bulletins,  giving  the  serial  number  of  the  bulletin  without 
specifying  the  topics  treated  in  it. 
[Cir.  19] 


23 

183.  Value  of  stable  manure — Alfalfa  as  a  fertilizer — Liming  acid  soils — Frost-resisting 
strawberries — Ridding  houses  of  flies,  etc.     Pp.  32,  figs.  14. 

144.  Maintenance  of  soil  fertility — Rotation  of  crops — Cattle  and  poultry  foods — An 
improved  cow  stall,  etc.    Pp.  32,  figs.  9. 

149.  Culture  of  potatoes — Shrinkage  of  farm  products — Soils  and  fertilizers  for  straw- 
berries— Shelter  for  dairy  cows — Feed  mills  and  windmills,  etc.  Pp.  32, 
figs.  6. 

186.  Losses  in  manure — Protection  of  peach  buds — Dandelions  in  lawns — Rations  for 
laying  hens — Keeping  quality  of  butter,  etc.     Pp!  32,  figs.  9. 

190.  Cost  of  eggs  in  winter — Profitable  and  unprofitable  cows — Methods  of  milking — 
Coating  cheese  with  paraffin — Ventilation  of  stables,  etc.     Pp.  32,  figs.  14. 

210.  Hen  manure — Varieties  and  qualities  of  wheat — Corn  breeding — Injuries  to  shade 
trees — Oak  leaves  as  forage — The  covered  milk  pail — Fertilizers  for  potatoes, 
etc.    Pp.  32,  figs.  7. 

222.  Home  mixing  of  fertilizers — Weight  per  quart  of  feeding  stuffs — Recent  horse- 
feeding  tests — ^Market  classes  and  grades  of  swine — Silage  in  place  of  grain 
for  dairy  cows,  etc.    Pp.  32,  fig.  1. 

225.  Incompatibles  in  fertilizer  mixtures — Value  of  flint  varieties  of  com — Buying  and 
judging  seed  com — Potato  culture — Influence  of  feed  on  milk — Protecting 
cows  from  flies — ^A  successful  brooder  house — Prevention  of  swelling  in 
canned  peas,  etc.    Pp.  32,  figs.  6. 

233.  Root  systems  of  plants — Mushroom  culture — Noodles — Condimental  feeds — 
Beef  V.  dairy  type  for  beef  production — Feeding  calves  skim  milk — Milk 
from  diseased  cows — Cider  vinegar,  etc.     Pp.  32,  figs.  5. 

237.  Lime  and  clover — Plant-food  requirements  of  fruit  trees — Running  out  of  seed 
wheat — Cereal  breakfast  foods — Damaged  wheat  as  feed — Bedding  for  cows — 
Amateur  poultry  raising — Care  of  cream  on  the  farm — Yeast  as  a  disinfectant, 
etc.    Pp.  32,  figs.  6. 

244.  Handling  seed  corn — Adaptation  of  seed  corn — Effect  of  root  nodules  on  compo- 
sition of  crops — Cooking  quality  of  potatoes — ^Methods  of  feeding  poultry — 
Covered  yards  for  cows,  etc.     Pp.  32,  figs.  6. 

251.  American  sugar-beet  seed— Profits  from  spraying  potatoes — Durum  wheat — 
Indoor  v.  outdoor  feeding  of  steers — Cheap  dairy  rations — Cotton-seed  meal 
for  hogs,  etc.    Pp.  32,  fig.  1. 

259.  Use  of  commercial  fertilizers— Spreading  lime — Soil  sterilization — Weights  per 
bushel  of  seeds — Disease-resistant  crops — Alfalfa  meal  as  a  feeding  stuff — 
Milk  fever — Nail  wounds  in  horses'  feet — Use  of  a  cheap  canning  outfit,  etc. 
Pp.  32,  figs.  3. 

267.  Breeding  com — Buckwheat — Grass  mulch  for  orchards — Hardiness  of  young 
fruit  trees — Protecting  cows  from  flies,  etc.     Pp.  32,  fig.  1. 

273.  Loss  of  nitrogen  from  soils — Manure  as  affected  by  feed — Continuous  corn  cul- 
ture— Pasturing  wheat — Rotting  of  potatoes  in  storage— Preserving  eggs — 
Testing  individual  cows — Cleanliness  in  the  dairy,  etc.     Pp.  32,  figs.  4. 

276.  Improvement  in  peach  growing — Alfalfa  in  the  Eastern  States— Improvement  of 
grass  land — Succotash  as  a  soiling  crop — Digestibility  of  fish  and  poultry — 
Honey  vinegar — ^The  farm  woodlot,  etc.     Pp.  32,  figs.  2. 

296.  Wells  and  pure  water — Pure  seed  v.  poor  seed — Disease-resistant  clover — Eradi- 
cation of  wild  mustard— Seedless  tomatoes — Hay  box  or  fireless  cooker — 
Insect  enemies  of  shade  trees,  etc.     Pp.  32,  figs.  4. 

305.  Renewal  of  old  orchards — Injury  by  Bordeaux  mixture— Roots  for  farm  ani- 
mals— Cabbage  as  a  stock  feed — Cull  beans  as  a  feed  for  hogs — Healthy  poul- 
try, etc.    Pp.  32. 
[Clr.  19] 


34 

309.  Ice  for  household  usee — Silage  from  frosted  com — Ck>o|>eratioii  in  marketing 
crops — Causes  of  death  of  young  chicks — Snow  for  poultry,  etc.     Pp.  32. 

316.  Winterkilling  of  peach  buds — Effect  of  fertilizers  on  the  color  of  apples — Potato 

scab — Cooking  cereal  foods — Supplements  to  com  in  hog  feeding — Hoppers 
for  poultry,  etc.    Pp.  32,  figs.  4. 

317.  Improving  the  convenience  and  comfort  of  the  farm  home — Cement  pipe  for 

irrigation — Increasing  the  productiveness  of  com — Catching  hook  for  poultry, 
etc.     Pp.  32,  figs.  6. 

329.  Low-grade  v.  high-grade  fertilizers — Improvement  of  sandy  soils — Dry  farming — 
Seed  selection — Evergreens:  Usee  and  culture — Prep>aration  of  miscible 
oils — Oane  sugar  and  beet  sugar,  etc.    Pp.  32,  figs.  4. 

334.  Plant  breeding  on  the  farm — Profits  from  tomato  growing — The  keeping  of 
apples — Weed  seeds  in  manure  and  feeding  stuffs — ^Market  classes  and  grades 
of  horses  and  mules — Extraction  of  beeswax,  etc.    Pp.  32,  figs.  2. 

342.  Conservation  of  soil  resources — Potato  breeding — Disk-harrowing  alfalfa — The 
Montreal  muskmelon — Storage  of  Hubbard  squash — Preserving  wild  mush- 
rooms— Cooking  beans  and  other  v^etables — A  model  kitchen,  etc.  Pp. 
32,  figs.  3. 

353.  Commercial  clover  seed — Growing  potatoes  under  straw— ^Hens  v.  incubators — 
Prepwiring  fowls  for  market — ^A  cheap  and  efficient  sterilizer — A  cheap  and 
efficient  ice  box — The  power  laundry  on  the  farm,  etc.     Pp.  32,  figs.  14. 

360.  Distance  between  com  hills — Street  trees — Spraying  for  weeds — Market  classes 
and  grades  of  sheep — Hulled  com — Mixing  fat  into  dough,  etc.  Pp.  32, 
figs.  6. 

366.  Treatment  of  muck  soils — Com  breeding — Hook-worm  disease  in  cattle — Effect 
of  machine  milking  on  cows — Milk  supply  of  cities — The  crow,  etc.     Pp.  32. 

374.  Inoculation  and  lime  for  alfalfa — Pruning  rotundifolia  grapes — Native  hays  of 
the  arid  r^ion — Bermuda  grass — Short  v.  long  feeding  of  beef  cattle — Feeding 
work  horses — Colony  houses  for  poultry — Flour  for  baking-powder  biscuits, 
etc.    Pp.  32,  figs.  5. 

381.  Methods  and  cost  of  clearing  land — Calf  feeding — Gasoline  heated  colony  brood- 
ers— Measuring  acidity  in  cheese  making  and  butter  making.     Pp.  32,  figs.  9. 

384.  Early  onions  in  the  Southwest — Oleander  poisoning  of  live  stock — Wintering 
farm  work  horses — Alfalfa  meal  as  a  feeding  stuff — Whipped  cream — Farm 
butter  making — Cement  and  concrete  fence  posts,  etc.     Pp.  32,  figs.  3. 

388.  Incompatibles  in  fertilizer  mixtures — Principles  of  dry  farming — Methods  of  seed- 
ing oats — Rolling  v.  harrowing  winter  wheat — ^Pruning — Bean  anthracnose  or 
pod  sf)ot — Jelly  and  jelly  making,  etc.     Pp.  32,  figs.  7. 

412.  Wart  disease  of  the  potato — The  typhoid  or  house  fly — ^The  forced  molting  of 
fowls — Pasteurization  in  butter  making — Milling  and  baking  tests  with  durum 
wheat,  etc.    Pp.  32,  figs.  6. 

419.  Tillage  v.  sod  mulch  in  orchards — Ear  characters  of  seed  com — Seed  disinfec- 
tion— Blackly  of  the  Irish  potato — Progress  in  horse  breeding — Sweet  pota- 
toes.    Pp.  24,  figs.  4. 

425.  Commercial  bean  growing — Digestion  experiments  with  range  forage  crops — 
Substitutes  for  oats  for  horses,  etc.     Pp.  24,  figs.  3. 

430.  Unusual  v.  standard  fertilizers — Symptoms  of  disease  in  plants — Condimental 
feeds — Feeding  the  dairy  calf — Defects  in  cottage  cheese — The  Iowa  silo. 
Pp.  24,  figs.  14. 

436.  Water  required  for  crops — Burning  lime  on  the  fann — ^Tomatoes  for  canning — 
Lime  sulphur  as  a  fungicide — Market  classes  and  grades  of  meat — Lice  on 
poultry — ^Neufchatel  cheese.    Pp.  24,  figs.  6. 
(Ctr.  19] 


I 


25 

451.  Sterilizing  tobacco-plant  beds — Clover  growing — Curing  clover  hay — ^The  velvet 

bean — Draft  horses — Care  of  mares  and  foals.     Pp.  24,  figs.  6. 
457.  Low-grade  fertilizers — Fighting  the  boll  weevil — Hastening  maturity  of  cotton 
with  fertilizers — Early  spring  lambs — Production  of  sanitary  milk — Lacto: 
A  frozen  dairy  product.     Pp.  24,  fig.  1. 

YEARBOOK   BEPRINT8. 

319.  The  Industry  in  Oil  Seeds.     Pp.  16.     (1903.) 

329.  The  Relation  of  Forests  to  Stream  Flow.    Pp.  10.     (1903.) 

364.  Some  Benefits  the  Farmer  May  Derive  from  Game  Protection.     Pp.  12.     (1904.) 

388.  Meadow  Mice  in  Relation  to  Agriculture  and  Horticulture.     Pp.  14,  pis.  4,  fig.  1. 

(1905.) 
392.  Illustrations  of  the  Influence  of  Experiment  Station  Work  on  Cultiu-e  of  Field 

Crops.     Pp.  16,  fig.  1.     (1905.) 
443.  Does  it  Pay  the  Farmer  to  Protect  Birds?    Pp.  14,  pis.  4.     (1907.) 
447.  The  Value  of  Insect  Parasitism  to  the  American  Farmer.     Pp.  20,  figs.  24.     (1907.) 

452.  The  Rabbit  as  a  Farm  and  Orchard  Pest.     Pp.  14.     (1907.) 

457.  Hygienic  Water  Supplies  for  Farms.     Pp.  10,  pi.  1,  figs.  4.     (1907.) 
497.  A  Directory  for  Farmers.     Pp.  25.     (Corrected  to  1909.) 

(Agricultural  statistics  of  crop  and  animal  products  are  also  published  for 
each  year  and  may  be  had  on  application  to  the  Secretary  of  Agriculture.) 

PUBLICATIONS  ADAPTED  TO  TEACHING  BOTANY.* 
farmers'  bulletins.^ 

28  (Rev.).  Weeds,  and  How  to  Kill  Them.     Pp.  30,  figs.  11. 

61.  Asparagus  Cultiu-e.     Pp.  40,  figs.  17. 

86.  Thirty  Poisonous  Plants.     Pp.  32,  figs.  24. 

91.  Potato  Diseases  and  Their  Treatment.     Pp.  11,  figs.  4. 
139.  Emmer:  A  Grain  for  Semiarid  Regions.     Pp.  16,  figs.  3. 
157.  The  Propagation  of  Plants.     Pp.  24,  figs.  22. 
174.  Broom  Com.     Pp.  30,  figs.  10. 
188.  Weeds  Used  in  Medicine.     Pp.  45,  figs.  31. 
194.  Alfalfa  Seed.     Pp.  14,  figs.  55. 

229.  The  Production  of  Good  Seed  Com.     Pp.  23,  figs.  10. 
248.  The  Lawn.     Pp.  20,  figs.  5. 
253.  The  Germination  of  Seed  Com.     Pp.  16,  figs.  4. 
260.  Seed  of  Red  Clover  and  Its  Impurities.     Pp.  24,  figs.  39. 
278.  Leguminous  Crops  for  Green  Manuring.     Pp.  27,  figs.  14. 
306.  Dodder  in  Relation  to  Farm  Seeds.     Pp.  27,  figs.  10. 
382.  The  Adulteration  of  Forage  Plant  Seeds.     Pp.  23,  figs.  19. 
408.  School  Exercises  in  Plant  Production.     Pp.  48,  fig.  39. 
443.  Barley:  Growing  the  Crop.     Pp.  48,  figs.  17. 
455.  Red  Clover.     Pp.  48,  figs.  25. 
464.  The  Eradication  of  Quack-grass.     Pp.  11,  figs.  6. 

DIVISION    OF  AGROSTOLOGY  CIRCULAR. 

31.  Bermuda  Grass.     Pp.  6,  figs.  2. 

1  Some  of  these  bulletins  are  equally  important  in  the  study  of  general  agriculture  and  horticultura 
They  are  listed  here  because  of  the  emphasis  given  in  them  to  botanical  features.  The  same  principle  of 
classification  is  followed  in  the  lists  under  other  si)ecial  titles  in  the  following  pages. 

2  See  also  Bulletins  105, 186,  233,  251,  267,  296,  316,  334,  342,  353,  360,  388,  and  412  in  the  list  under  Experi- 
ment Station  Work,  pp.  22-24. 

[Cir.  19J 


26 


mvnioN  or  botakt  ontcTTLABS. 

7.  Tumbling  Mustard.    Pp.  8,  figs.  3. 
27  (Rev.).  Canada  Thistle.     Pp.  14,  figs.  4 
30  (Rev.).  List  of  Publications  of  the  Division  of  Botany.    Pp.  10. 

BUREAU   or  PLANT  INDU8TBY  CIRCULARS. 

2.  An  Improved  Method  of  Separating  Buckhom  from  Red  Clover  and  Alfalfa 
Seeds.     Pp.  12. 
62.  Wart  Disease  of  the  Potato.     Pp.  11,  pis.  2. 

62.  The  Separation  of  Seed  Barley  by  the  Specific  Gravity  Method.     Pp.  6,  fig.  1. 

63.  Methods  of  L^>iime  Inoculation.     Pp.  5. 

73.  The  Distinguishing  Characters  of  the  Seeds  of  Quack-grass  and  of  Certain  Wheat- 
grasses.     Pp.  9,  figs.  7. 
76.  The  Relation  of  Crown-gall  to  Legume  Inoculation.    Pp.  6,  figs.  4. 

OFFICE   OF  EXPERIMENT  STATIONS. 

Circ.  34  (Rev.).  Rules  and  Apparatus  for  Seed  Testing.     Pp.  24,  figs.  11. 

Doc.  584.  The  Need  of  Better  Courses  of  Preparation  for  Work  in  Applied  Botany. 
Pp.  3. 

'  Farmers'  Institute  Lecture  No.  2.  Potato  Diseases  and  Their  Treatment.  (Sylla- 
bus illustrated  with  47  lantern  slides.)    Pp.  30. 

TEARBOOK   REPRINTS. 

20.  Grasses  as  Sand  and  Soil  Binders.     Pp.  16,  figs.  11.     (1894.) 
85.  Method  of  Propagating  the  Orange  and  other  Citrus  Fruits.     Pp.  18,  figs.  13. 
(1896.) 

124.  Hybrid.?  and  their  Utilization  in  Plant  Breeding.  Pp.  38,  figs.  12,  pis.  4. 
(1897.) 

157.  Pollination  of  Pomaceous  Fruits.     Pp.  14,  figs.  13.     (1898.) 

203.  Commercial  Plant  Introduction.     Pp.  14.     (1900.) 

262.  The  Contamination  of  Public  Water  Supplies  by  Algae.     Pp.  12,  pis.  2.     (1902.) 

319.  The  Industry  in  Oil  Seeds.     Pp.  16.     (1903.) 

446.  The  Art  of  Seed  Selection  and  Breeding.     Pp.  16,  pis.  5.     (1907.) 

530.  Nitrogen-gathering  Plants.     Pp.  8,  pis.  8.     (1910.) 

540.  Increased  Yields  of  Com  from  Hybrid  Seed.     Pp.  12.     (1910.) 

PUBLICATIONS  ADAPTED  TO  TEACHmO  CHSMISTST. 

farmers'    BULLETINS.' 

44  (Rev.).  Commercial  Fertilizers.     Pp.  38. 

77  (Rev.).  The  Liming  of  Soils.     Pp.  24. 

88.  Alkali  Lands.     Pp.  23,  fig.  1. 
127  (Rev.).  Important  Insecticides:  Directions  for  their  Preparation  and  Use.    Pp. 

45,  figs.  6. 
145.  Carbon  Bisulphid  as  an  Insecticide.     Pp.  28. 

268.  Industrial  Alcohol:  Sources  and  Manufacture.     Pp.  45,  figs.  10. 

278.  Leguminous  Crops  for  Green  Manuring.     (A  Source  of  Nitrogen  in  the  Soil.) 

Pp.  27,  figs.  14. 
877.  Harmfulness  of  Headache  Mixtures.     Pp.  16. 
410.  Potato  Culls  as  a  Source  of  Industrial  Alcohol.     Pp.  40,  figs.  10. 

269.  Industrial  Alcohol:  Uses  and  Statistics.     Pp.  32,  figs.  3. 

I  See  footnote,  p.  10. 

*See  also  Bulletins  84,  92, 105, 107,  124, 186,  222,  225,  237,  273,  329,  381,  and  S8S  in  the  list  under  Ezperi. 
mant  .SUtion  Work,  pp.  22-24. 
(Cir.  19] 


27 

BUREAU  OP  CHEMISTRY  CIRCULARS. 

1.  The  Manufacture  of  Sorghum  Sirup.     Pp.  3. 
25.  Coloring  Matters  for  Foodstuffs  and  Methods  for  their  Detection.     Pp.  40. 
36.  Chemical  Methods  for  Utilizing  Wood.     Pp.  47,  figs.  16. 

40.  Methods  for  the  Analysis  of  Maple  Products,  and  the  Detection  of  Adulterants, 

Together  with  the  Interpretation  of  the  Results  Obtained.     Pp.  13. 

41.  Paper-making  Materials  and  their  Conservation.     Pp.  23. 

56.  The  Determination  of  Total  Sulphur  in  Organic  Matter.     Pp.  9. 

58.  The  Effect  of  Alcohol  on  Invertase.     Pp.  8,  figs.  2. 

62.  A  Comparison  of  Beef  and  Yeast  Extracts  of  Known  Origin.     Pp.  7. 

66.  Extracts  from  the  Proceedings  of  the  Association  of  OflScial  Agricultural  Chem- 

ists, 1910.     Pp.  27. 

67.  A  Method  for  the  Determination  of  Tin  in  Canned  Foods.     Pp.  9. 

68.  Tomato  Ketchup  Under  the  Microscope;  with  Practical  Suggestions  to  Insure  a 

Cleanly  Product.     Pp.  14. 

BUREAU  OF  ENTOMOLOGY  CIRCULARS. 

37  (Rev.).  The  Use  of  Hydrocyanic-acid  Gas  for  Fumigating  Greenhouses  and  Cold 

Frames.    Pp.  10,  figs.  S. 
46  (Rev.).  Hydrocyanic-acid  Gas  Against  Household  Insects.    Pp.  7. 

OFFICE   OF  EXPERIMENT  STATIONS. 

Doc.  428.  Recent  Results  with  Hydrocyanic-acid  Gas  for  the  Destruction  of  Insects  in 

Large  Buildings.     Pp.5. 
'  Farmers'  Institute  Lecture  No.  3.    Acid  Soils.     (Syllabus  illustrated  with  53  lantern 

slides.)    Pp.  28. 

YEARBOOK   REPRINTS. 

411.  The  Present  Status  of  the  Nitrogen  Problem.     Pp.  11.     (1906.) 
529.  Inspection  of  Imported  Food  and  Drug  Products.     Pp.  16.     (1910.) 

PUBLICATIONS  ADAPTED  TO  TEACHING  DOMESTIC   SCIENCE   AND 

HYGIENE. 

farmers'    BULLETINS. 2 

34.  Meats:  Composition  and  Cooking.    Pp.  31,  figs.  4. 

85  (Rev.).  Fish  as  Food.     Pp.  32. 

93.  Sugar  as  Food.     Pp.  26. 

121  (Rev.).  Beans,  Peas,  and  other  Legumes  as  Food.    Pp.  38,  figs.  10. 
128  (Rev.).  Eggs  and  their  Uses  as  Food.     Pp.  31. 
131.  Household  Tests  for  the  Detection  of  Oleomargarine  and  Renovated  Butter. 

Pp.  10. 
142  (Rev.).  The  Nutritive  and  Economic  Value  of  Food.     Pp.  48,  charts  2. 
155.  How  Insects  Affect  Health  in  Rural  Districts.     Pp.  19,  figs.  16. 
166.  Cheese  Making  on  the  Farm.     Pp.  16,  figs.  3. 
175.  Home  Manufacture  and  Use  of  Unfermented  Grape  Juice.     Pp.  16,  figs.  8. 

182.  Poultry  as  Food.     Pp.  40. 

183.  Meat  on  the  Farm:  Butchering,  Curing,  and  Keeping.     Pp.  37,  figs.  35. 
188.  Weeds  Used  in  Medicine.     Pp.  45,  figs.  31. 

203.  Canned  Fruit,  Preserves,  and  Jellies.     Pp.  32,  figs.  5. 
234.  The  Guinea  Fowl  and  its  Use  as  Food.     Pp.  24,  figs.  3. 
241.  Butter  Making  on  the  Farm.     Pp.  32. 

1  See  footnote,  p.  10. 

2  See  also  many  bulletins  relating  to  this  subject  in  the  list  under  Experiment  Station  Work,  p.  22. 

[Cir  19] 


28 

249.  Cereal  Breakfaat  Foods.    Pp.  36. 

256.  Preparation  of  Vegetables  for  the  Table.    Pp.  48. 

270.  Modem  Conveniences  for  the  Farm  Home.    Pp.  48,  figs.  26. 

291.  Evaporation  of  Apples.     Pp.  38,  figs.  16. 

293.  Use  of  Fruit  as  Food.     Pp.  38,  fig.  1. 

295.  Potatoes  and  Other  Root  Crops  as  Food.    Pp.  45,  figs.  4. 

298.  Food  Value  of  Com  and  Cora  Products.     Pp.  40,  figs.  2. 

332.  Nuts  and  Their  Uses  as  Food.     Pp.  28,  fig.  1. 

346.  Some  Common  Disinfectants.     Pp.  12. 

348.  Bacteria  Milk.     Pp.  21,  figs.  6. 

369.  Canning  Vegetables  in  the  Home.    Pp.  16,  figs.  9. 

363.  The  Use  of  Milk  as  Food.     Pp.  44,  charts  4. 

376.  Care  of  Food  in  the  Home.    Pp.  46,  figs.  2. 

377.  Harmfulness  of  Headache  Mixtures.     Pp.  16. 
389.  Bread  and  Bread  Making.     Pp.  47,  figs.  7. 
391.  Economical  Use  of  Meat  in  the  Home.     Pp.  43. 

393.  Habit-forming  Agents:  Their  Indiscriminate  Sale  and  Use  a  Menace  to  the  Public 

Welfare.    Pp.  19,  figs.  6. 
413.  The  Care  of  Milk  and  Its  Use  in  the  Home.     Pp.  20. 
426.  Canning  Peaches  on  the  Farm.     Pp.  26,  figs.  14. 
444.  Remedies  and  Preventives  Against  Mosquitoes.     Pp.  16. 
460.  Some  Facts  about  Malaria.     Pp.  13,  figs.  6. 
459.  House  Flies.     Pp.  16,  figs.  9. 
463.  The  Sanitary  Privy.     Pp.  32,  figs.  9. 
473.  Tuberculosis.    Pp.  23,  figs.  13. 
478.  How  to  Prevent  Typhoid  Fever.     Pp.  8. 

BUREAU   OP  ANIMAL  INDUSTRY  CIRCULAH8. 

1  (Rev.).  Directions  for  the  Pasteurization  of  Milk.     P.  1. 
56.  Facts  Concerning  the  History,  Commerce,  and  Manufacture  of  Butter.    Pp.  24. 
74  (Rev.).  United  States  and  State  Standards  for  Dairy  Products,  1909.     Pp.  2. 
101.  The  New  Meat-inspection  Law  and  Its  Bearing  upon  the  Production  and  Han- 
dling of  Meats.     Pp.  16. 
108.  Trichinosis:  A  Danger  in  the  Use  of  Raw  Pork  for  Food.     Pp.  6,  figs.  5. 

126.  The  Federal  Meat  Inspection  Service.     Pp.  40,  pis.  15,  fig.  1. 

127.  Tubercle   Bacilli    in    Butter:  Their   Occurrence,    Vitality,    and    Significance. 

Pp.23. 

142.  Some  Important  Factors  in  the  Production  of  Sanitary  Milk.     Pp.  18,  figs.  12. 

143.  Milk  and  its  Products  as  Carriers  of  Tuberculosis  Infection.     Pp.  16. 

152.  Directions  for  the  Home  Pasteurization  of  Milk.     Pp.  2. 

153.  The  Dissemination  of  Disease  by  Dairy  Products  and  Methods  for  its  Preven- 

tion.   Pp.  57,  fip.  11. 

154.  The  Need  of  State  and  Municipal  Meat  Inspection  to  Supplement  Federal  Inspec 

tion.     Pp.  14,  figs.  6. 
161.  Whey  Butter.    Pp.  7. 
166.  The  Digestibility  of  Cheese.     Pp.  22. 
170.  The  Extra  Cost  of  Producing  Clean  Milk.     Pp.  12,  pis.  4,  figs.  3. 

BUREAU   OF  PLANT  INDUSTRY  CIRCULAR. 

74.  The  Sulphur  Bleaching  of  Commercial  Oats  and  Barley      Pp.  13,  figs.  4. 

BUREAU   OP  CHEMISTRY  CIRCULARS. 

15.  Results  of  Borax  Experiment.     Pp.  27. 

16.  (Rev.).  Officials  Charged  with  the  Enforcement  of  Food  Laws  in  the  United 

States  and  Canada.    Pp.  36. 

(Or.  19) 


29 

25.  Coloring  Matters  for  Foodstuffs  and  Methods  for  Their  Detection.     Pp.  40. 
31.  General  Results  of  the  Investigation  Showing  the  Effect  of  Salicylic  Acid  and 

Salicylates  upon  Digestion  and  Health.     Pp.  12,  fig.  1. 
37.  General  Results  of  the  Investigations  Showing  the  Effect  of  Sulphurous  Acid 

and  Sulphites  upon  Digestion  and  Health.     Pp.  18,  fig.  1. 
42.  General  Results  of  the  Investigations  Showing  the  Effect  of  Formaldehyde  upon 

Digestion  and  Health.    Pp.  16. 
62.  A  Comparison  of  Beef  and  Yeast  Extracts  of  Known  Origin.    Pp.  7. 

67.  A  Method  for  the  Determination  of  Tin  in  Canned  Foods.     Pp.  9. 

68.  Tomato  Ketchup  Under  the  Microscope;  with  Practical  Suggestions  to  Insure 

a  Cleanly  Product.     Pp.14. 
51.  The  Value  of  Peaches  as  Vinegar  Stock.     Pp.  7. 
54.  Analysis  of  Canned  Peas  and  Beans,  Showing  Composition  of  Different  Grades. 

Pp.  9. 
57.  Experiments  on  the  Preparation  of  Sugared  Dried  Pineapples.     Pp.  8,  fig.  1. 
61.  How  to  Kill  and  Bleed  Market  Poultry.     Pp.  15,  figs.  5. 

BUREAU    OF   ENTOMOLOGY   CIRCULAES. 

5  (Rev.).  The  Carpet  Beetle,  or  "Buffalo  Moth."     Pp.  4,  fig.  1. 

34  (Rev.).  House  Ants.     Pp.  4,  figs.  3. 

36  (Rev.).  The  True  Clothes  Moths.     Pp.  8,  figs.  3. 

36  (Rev.).  Hydrocyanic-acid  Gas  Against  Household  Insecta.     Pp.  7. 

47  (Rev.).  The  Bedbug.     Pp.  8,  figs.  3. 

51  (Rev.).  Cockroaches.     Pp.  14,  figs.  5. 

71  (Rev.).  House  Flies.     Pp.  9,  figs.  10. 

77.  Harvest  Mites,  or  "Chiggers."     Pp.  6,  figs.  3. 
108.  House  Fleas.     Pp.  4,  figs.  2. 
118.  A  Predaceous  Mite  Proves  Noxious  to  Man.     Pp.  24,  figs.  13. 

OFFICE    OF  THE    SECRETARY   CIRCULARS. 

21  (3.  Rev.).  Rules  and  Regulations  for  the  Enforcement  of  the  Food  and  Drxigs  Act. 

Pp.20. 
110.  Food  Customs  and  Diet  in  American  Homes.     Pp.  32. 

OFFICE    OF   EXPERIMENT   STATIONS   CmCULAB. 

46.  The  Functions  and  Uses  of  Food.    Pp.  11. 

OFFICE   OP   EXPERIMENT   STATIONS   DOCUMENTS. 

566.  Dietary  Studies  of  Groups,  Especially  in  Public  Institutions.     Pp.  30. 

713.  Investigations  on  the  Nutrition  of  Man  in  the  United  States.     Pp.  20,  pis.  6. 
1027.  The  Nutrition  Investigations  of  the  OflSce  of  Experiment  Stations  and  Their 

Results.     Pp.  14. 
1056.  The  Economic  Seaweeds  of  Hawaii  and  Their  Food  Value.    Pp.  28,  pis.  4. 

OFFICE    OP   EXPERIMENT   STATIONS   FARMERS'    INSTITUTE    LECTURES.^ 

1.  The  Care  of  Milk.     (Syllabus  illustrated  with  44  lantern  slides.)     Pp.  12. 
10.  Production  and  Marketing  of  Eggs  and  Fowls.     (Syllabus  illustrated  with  44 
lantern  slides.)    Pp.  20. 

YEARBOOK   REPRINTS. 

94.  Utilization  of  By-products  of  the  Dairy.     Pp.  20.     (1897.) 
221.  The  Use  and  Abuse  of  Food  Preservatives.     Pp.  10.     (1900.) 
262.  The  Contamination  of  Public  Water  Supplies  by  Algse.    Pp.  12,  pis.  2.    (1902.) 
280.  The  Cost  of  Food  as  Related  to  Its  Nutritive  Value.    Pp.  20.     (1902.) 

'  See  footnote,  p.  10. 
|Oir.  lOJ 


324.  Wheat  Flour  and  Bread.    Pp.  16.    (1903.) 

326.  Macaroni  Wheat.     Pp.  8.     (1903.) 

339.  Inspection  of  Foreign  Food  Producta.     Pp.  7.     (1904.) 

454.  Food  and  Diet  in  the  United  States.    Pp.  18,    (1907.) 

455.  The  Use  of  the  Microeco|>e  in  the  Detection  of  Food  Adulteration.     Pp.  6,  pis.  4. 

(1907.) 
457.  Hygienic  Water  Supplies  for  Farms.     Pp.  10,  pi.  1,  figs.  4.     (1907.) 
468.  Changes  Taking  Place  in  Chickens  in  Cold  Storage.    Pp.  9,  pis.  7.    (1907.) 
518.  Comforts  and  Conveniences  in  Farmers'  Homes.     Pp.  11,  figs.  6.    (1909.) 
529.  Inspection  of  Imported  Food  and  Drug  Producta.     Pp.  16.    (1910.) 
536.  The  Grading  of  Cream.     Pp.  8.     (1910.) 

539.  The  Respiration  Calorimeter  and  the  Results  of  Some  Experiments  with  it.     Pp. 
16,  pis.  2.      (1910.) 

543.  Cheese  and  Other  Substitutes  for  Meat  in  the  Diet.     Pp.  16.     (1910.) 

544.  The  Value  of  the  Shellfish  Industry  and  the  Protection  of  Oysters  from  Sewage 

Contamination.     Pp.  12,  pis.  2.     (1910.) 

PUBLICATIONS  ADAPTED  TO  TEACHINO  GEOGSAPHT. 
farmers'  bulletins. 

52  (Rev.).  The  Sugar  Beet.     Pp.  48,  figs.  24. 

62.  Marketing  Farm  Produce.     Pp.  31,  figs.  17. 

83.  Tobacco  Soils.     Pp.  23,  fig.  1. 
110.  Rice  Cultiu*  in  the  United  States.    Pp.  28. 
140.  Pineapple  Growing.     Pp.  48,  figs.  4. 
174.  Broom  Com.     Pp.  30,  figs.  10. 
274.  Flax  Culture.    Pp.  36,  figs.  11. 

335.  Harmful  and  Beneficial  Mammals  of  the  Arid  Interior.    Pp.  31,  figs.  9. 
372.  Soy  Beans.     Pp.  26,  figs.  6, 

427.  Barley  Culture  in  the  Southern  States.     Pp.  16,  figs.  6. 
436.  Winter  Oats  for  the  South.    Pp.  32,  fiigs.  9. 

BUREAU   OP  PIANT  INDUSTRY. 

Circ.  55.  American  Export  Com  in  Europe.     Pp.  42,  figs.  7. 

57.  The  Cultivation  of  Hemp  in  the  United  States.     Pp.  7,  fig.  1. 
60.  Suggestions  to  Settlers  on  the  Sandy  Soils  of  the  Columbia  River  Valley. 
Pp.  23, 
Doc.  457.  Agricultural  Conditions  in  Southern  Texas.     Pp.  8. 
figs.  2. 

BUREAU  OF  ANIMAL  INDUSTRY  CIRCULARS. 

17.  Exports  of  Animals  and  Their  Products.     Pp.  3. 

37.  Preliminary  Report  on  Argentina  as  a  Market  for  Pure-bred  Cattle  from  the 
United  States.    Pp.  4. 

BUREAU   OF  ANIMAL  INDUSTRY  ORDERS. 

61.  Conceming  the  Exportation  of  Cattle  and  Sheep  in  Vessels  Carrying  Hides  from 

Foreign  Countries.     P.  1. 
92.  Special  Order  Prohibiting  the  Landing  of  Animals  from  the  Philippine  Islands  at 
any  of  the  Porta  of  the  United  States  or  of  the  Dependencies  thereof.     P.  1. 
139.  R^ulations  Governing  the  Inspection,  Humane  Handling,  and  Safe  Transport 
of  Animals  Carried  by  Ocean  Steamers  from  the  United  States  to  Foreign 
Countries.    Pp.  18. 
155.  To  Prevent  the  Spread  of  Foot-and-mouth  Disease  in  Cattle,  Sheep,  Swine,  »nd 
Goata,  Rule  6.    Pp.  2. 
[Or.  10] 


31 

BUREAU  OP  BIOLOGICAL  SURVEY  CIRCULARS. 

30.  Wild  Animals  and  Birds  Which  may  be  Imported  without  Permits.     P.  1. 

77.  Annual  Report  of  the  Governor  of  Alaska  on  the  Alaska  Game  Law,  1910.    Pp.  7. 

DIVISION   OF  BOTANY  CIRCULAR. 

28.  Rubber  Cultivation  for  Porto  Rico.    Pp.  12. 

BUREAU   OP  ENTOMOLOGY  CIRCULARS. 

41.  Regulations  of  Foreign  Governments  Regarding  Importation  of  American  Plants, 

Trees,  and  Fruits.     Pp.  4. 
75  (Rev.).  Requirements  to  be  Complied   with  by  Nurserymen  and  Others  Who 

Make  Interstate  Shipments  of  Nursery  Stock.    Pp.  9. 

FOREST   SERVICE   CIRCULARS. 

Descriptive  of  the  trees  native  to  the  various  States.     (Send  names  of  trees  for  which 
descriptions  are  desired.    The  statistics  of  forest  products  of  the  United 
States  can  also  be  had  each  year.) 
44.  Wood  Used  for  Pulp  in  1905.     Pp.  11. 
49.  Timber  Used  in  the  Mines  of  the  United  States  in  1905.     Pp.  8. 

52.  The  Lumber  Cut  of  the  United  States  in  1905.     Pp.  23. 

53.  Wood  Used  for  Tight  Cooperage  Stock  in  1905.     Pp.  8. 

(Also  No.  125  for  similar  statistics  of  1906.) 
97.  The  Timber  Supply  of  the  United  States.     Pp.  16,  figs.  2. 
102.  Production  of  Red  Cedar  for  Pencil  Wood.     Pp.  19. 

113.  Use  of  Dead  Timber  in  the  National  Forests.    Pp.  4. 

114.  Wood  Distillation.     Pp.  8. 

119.  Consumption  of  Tanbark  and  Tanning  Extract  in  1906.     Pp.  9. 

129.  The  Drain  upon  the  Forests.     Pp.  16,  figs.  8. 

140.  What  Forestry  Has  Done.    Pp.  32. 

155.  Production  and  Consumption  of  Basket  Willows  in  the  United  States  for  1906 

and  1907.     Pp.  14. 
163.  Paper  Birch  in  the  Northeast.     Pp.  37,  figs.  2. 
171.  The  Forests  of  the  United  States:  Their  Use.    Pp.  25. 
176.  Surface  Conditions  and  Stream  Flow.    Pp.  16. 

BUREAU   OF  SOILS   SEPARATES. 

Maps  of  Soil  Surveys  in  the  various  States.     (Send  for  those  desired  for  the  State 
studied.) 

OFFICE    OF   PUBLIC   ROADS   CIRCULAR. 

38.  A  Study  of  Rock  Decomposition  Under  the  Action  of  Water.     Pp.  10. 

OFFICE    OF   THE    SECRETARY   CIRCULAR. 

32.  GoUoD,  the  Greatest  of  Cash  Crops.     Pp.  10. 

YEARBOOK   REPRINTS. 

112.  Trees  of  the  United  States  Important  in  Forestry.     Pp.  26.     (1897.) 
132.  Danger  of  Introducing  Noxious  Animals  and  Birds.     Pp.  22,  pi.  1,  figs.  2.    (1898.) 
151.  Agriculture  in  Porto  Rico.     Pp.  10,  pi.  1.     (1898.) 

196.  Smyrna  Fig  Culture  in  the  United  States.     Pp.  27,  pis.  8,  figs.  7.    (1900.) 
203.  Commercial  Plant  Introduction.    Pp.  14.    (1900.) 
210.  Mountain  Roads.    Pp.  16,  pis.  3.    (1900.) 
ICir.  101 


253.  Mountain  Roads  tm  a  Source  of  Revenue.    Pp.  14,  pis.  7.    (1901.) 
266.  Wheat  Porta  of  the  Pacific  Coaat.     Pp.  14,  pis.  5.     (1901.) 

281.  Grape,  Raisin,  and  Wine  Production  in  the  United  States.    Pp.  14,  pis.  8.  (1902.) 

282.  Flaxseed  Production,  Commerce,  and  Manufacture  in  the  United  States.    Pp.18. 

(1902.) 

283.  330,  399, 450, 496,  521,  and  549.  Promising  New  Fruits.     (IlluetJated  with  colored 

plates;  for  years  1902,  1903,  1905,  1907,  1908,  1909,  and  1910.) 
313.  The  U.  S.  Department  of  Agriculture  and  Silk  Culture.     Pp.  12.     (1903.) 
317.  Relation  of  Cold  Storage  to  Commercial  Apple  Orcharding.     Pp.  14,  pis.  6.   (1903.) 
319.  The  Industry  in  OU  Seeds.     Pp.  16.     (1903.) 
329.  The  Relation  of  Forests  to  Stream  Flow.     Pp.  10.     (1903.) 
839.  Inspection  of  Foreign  Food  Products.     Pp.  7.     (1904.) 
354.  Some  Uses  of  the  Grapevine  and  Its  Fruit.     Pp.  17,  pis.  6,  figs.  5.     (1904.) 
861.  Cotton  Culture  in  Guatemala.     Pp.  14,  pis.  3,  fig.  1.     (1904.) 
387.  The  Handling  of  Fruit  for  Transportation.     Pp.  14,  pis.  4.     (1905.) 
453.  The  Status  of  the  American  Lemon  Industry.     Pp.  18,  pis.  5,  figs.  2.     (1907.)  . 
459.  Truck  Farming  in  the  Atlantic  Seacoast  States.    Pp.  10,  pis.  3.    (1907.) 
462.  The  Game  Resources  of  Alaska.     Pp.  14,  pis.  2,  figs.  3.     (1907.) 

(Agricultiiral  statistics  of  the  United  States  may  be  had  each  year  as  Year- 
book reprints,  on  application.) 
633.  The  Game  Market  of  To-day.     Pp.  16,  figs.  2.     (1910.) 
534.  Progress  in  Saving  Forest  Waste.     Pp.  16,  pis.  3.     (1910.) 
641.  The  Utilization  of  Crop  Plants  in  Paper  Making.     Pp.  16,  figs.  3.     (1910.) 
544.  The  Value  of  the  Shellfish  Industry  and  the  Protection  of  Oysters  from  Sewage 

Contamination.     Pp.  12,  pi.  2.     (1910.) 

547.  Mountain  Snowfall  Observations  and  Evaporation  Investigations  in  the  United 

States.     Pp.  12,  pi.  1.     (1910.) 

548.  Fire  Prevention  and  Control  in  the  National  Forests.     Pp.  16,  pis.  6.     (1910.) 
551.  Camphor  Cultivation  in  the  United  States.     Pp.  16,  pla.  3.     (1910.) 

PUBLICATIONS  ADAPTED  TO  TEACHING  PHYSICS. 

FARMEBS'    BULLETINS.* 

104.  Notes  on  Frost.     Pp.  23. 

138.  Irrigation  in  Field  and  Garden.     Pp.  40,  figs.  18. 

150.  Clearing  New  Land.     Pp.  24,  figs.  7. 

239.  The  Corrosion  of  Fence  Wire.     Pp.  32, 

245.  Renovation  of  Worn-out  Soils.     Pp.  16. 

266.  Management  of  Soils  to  Conserve  Moisture.     Pp.  30,  figs.  7. 

277.  The  Use  of  Alcohol  and  Gasoline  in  Farm  Engines.     Pp.  40,  figs.  12. 

367.  Lightning  and  Lightning  Conductors.    Pp.  20,  figs.  3. 

BUREAU  OF  PLANT  INDUSTRY  CIRCULAR. 

62.  The  Separation  of  Seed  Barley  by  the  Specific  Gravity  Method.    Pp.  6,  fig.  1. 

BUREAU  OF  SOILS  CIBCULAB. 

13.  The  Work  of  the  Bureau  of  Soils.    Pp.  13. 

OFFICE   OF  PtTBLIC  ROADS  CIRCUIAR. 

SS.  A  Study  of  Rock  Decomposition  under  the  Action  of  Water.     Pp.  10. 

I  See  also  BalleUns  110  and  124  under  Experiment  Button  Work,  p.  23. 
(Cir.l»l 


33 

TBAKBOOK   REPRINTS. 

411.  The  Present  Status  of  the  Nitrogen  Problem.     (Fixation  of  Nitrogen  from  Air  by 

the  Electric  Method.)    Pp.  11. 
492.  Instruments  for  Making  Weather  Observations  on  the  Farm.    Pp.  10,  pi.  1, 

figs.  2. 
547.  Mountain  Snowfall  Observations  and  Evaporation  Investigations  in  the  United 

States.     Pp.  12,"fig.  1.     (1910.) 
550.  The  Precooling  of  Fruit.     Pp.  16,  pis.  5.     (1910.) 

PUBLICATIONS  ADAPTED  TO  TEACHING   PHYSIOLOGY. 

farmers'  bulletins.' 

34.  Meats:  Composition  and  Cooking.     Pp.  31,  figs.  4. 

85.  (Rev.).  Fish  as  Food.     Pp.  32. 

86.  Thirty  Poisonous  Plants.     Pp.  32,  figs.  24. 
93.  Sugar  as  Food.    Pp.  26. 

121.  (Rev.).  Beans,  Peas,  and  other  Legumes  as  Food.    Pp.  38,  figs.  10. 

142.  (Rev.).  The  Nutritive  and  Economic  Value  of  Food.     Pp.  48,  charts  2. 

155.  How  Insects  Affect  Health  in  Rural  Districts.     Pp.  19.  figs.  16. 

182.  Poultry  as  Food.     Pp.  40. 

188.  Weeds  Used  in  Medicine.    Pp.  45,  figs.  31. 

249.  Cereal  Breakfast  Foods.     Pp.  36. 

293.  Use  of  Fruit  as  Food.     Pp.  38,  fig.  1. 

295.  Potatoes  and  other  Root  Crops  as  Food.     Pp.  45,  figs.  4. 

298.  Food  Value  of  Com  and  Corn  Products.     Pp.  40,  figs.  2. 

332.  Nuts  and  Their  Uses  as  Food.     Pp.  28,  fig.  1. 

363.  The  Use  of  Milk  as  Food.     Pp.  44,  charts  4. 

377.  Harmfulness  of  Headache  Mixtures.     Pp.  16. 

393.  Habit-forming  Agents:  Their  Indiscriminate  Sale  and  Use  a  Menace  to  the 

Public  Welfare.     Pp.  19,  figs.  5. 
413.  The  Care  of  Milk  and  Its  Use  in  the  Home.     Pp.  20. 

BUREAU   OF   CHEMISTRY   CIRCULARS. 

15,  16,  31,  37.  (See  titles  of  these  in  the  list  under  Hygiene  and  Domestic  Science, 
p.  24.) 

OFFICE   OF   EXPERIMENT   STATIONS   CIRCULAR. 

46.  The  Functions  and  Uses  of  Food.     Pp.  11. 

TEARBOOK   REPRINTS. 

454,  457.  (See  titles  of  these  in  the  list  under  Hygiene  and  Domestic  Science,  p.  28.) 

PUBLICATIONS  ADAPTED  TO  TEACHINO  ZOOLOGY  (INCLUDINa 
ENTOMOLOGY). 

farmers'    BULLETINS.^ 

47.  Insects  Affecting  the  Cotton  Plant.     Pp.  32,  figs.  18. 

51  (Rev.).  Standard  Varieties  of  Chickens.     Pp.  48,  figs.  42. 

54  (Rev.).  Some  Common  Birds  in  Their  Relation  to  Agriculture.    Pp.  48,  figs.  22. 
59  (Rev.).  Bee  Keeping.    Pp.  47,  figs.  19. 
64  (Rev.).  Ducks  and  Geese.     Pp.  55,  figs.  37. 
106.  Breeds  of  Dairy  Cattle.     Pp.  48,  figs.  21. 

'See  additional  bulletins  in  tke  list  given  for  Domestic  Science  and  Hygiene,  p.  27. 
«See  also  Bulletins  87, 133,  225,  267,  and  296  in  the  list  under  Experiment  Station  Work,  pp.  22,  23. 
[Cir.  19] 


84 

120.  Iiwects  Affecting  Tobacco.    Pp.  32,  tigs.  25. 

132.  Inaect  Enemies  of  Growing  Wheat.    Pp.  38,  figs.  26. 

165.  Silkworm  Culture.    Pp.  32,  figs.  15. 

172.  Scale  Insects  and  Mites  on  Citrus  Trees.     Pp.  43,  figs.  34. 

196.  Usefulness  of  the  American  Toad.     Pp.  16. 

200.  Turkeys.    Pp.  40,  figs.  12. 

223.  Miscellaneous  Cotton  Insecta  in  Texas.     Pp.  23,  figs.  29. 

264.  The  Brown-tail  Moth  and  Uow  to  Control  It.     Pp.  22,  figs.  10. 

275.  The  Gipsy  Moth  and  How  to  Control  It.     Pp.  22,  figs.  7. 

290.  The  Cotton  BoUworm.     Pp.  32,  figs.  4. 

330.  Deer  Farming  in  the  United  States.     Pp.  20,  figs.  2. 

335.  Harmful  and  Beneficial  Mammals  of  the  Arid  Interior.     Pp.  31,  figs.  0. 

369.  How  to  Destroy  Rats.     Pp.  20,  figs.  5. 

383.  How  to  Destroy  English  Sparrows.     Pp.  11,  figs.  4. 

390.  Pheasant  Raising  in  the  United  States.     Pp.  40,  figs.  17. 

396.  The  Muskrat.     Pp.  38,  figs.  5. 

397.  Bees.     Pp.  44,  figs.  21. 

442.  The  Treatment  of  Bee  Diseases.     Pp.  22,  figs.  7. 

450.  Some  Facts  About  Malaria.     Pp.  13,  figs.  6. 

453.  Danger  of  General  Spread  of  the  Gipsy  and  Brown- tail  Moths  Through  Imported 

Nursery  Stock.     Pp.  22,  figs.  7. 
456.  Our  Grosbeaks  and  Their  Value  to  Agriculture.     Pp.  14,  figs.  3. 
459.  House  Flies.    Pp.  16,  figs.  9. 

BUREAU  OF  BIOLOOICAL  SURVEY  CIRCULARS. 

32  (Rev.).  Directions  for  the  Destruction  of  Prairie  Dogd.     Pp.  3,  fig.  1. 

56.  Value  of  Swallows  as  Insect  Destroyers.     Pp.  4. 

57.  Birds  Useful  in  the  War  Against  the  Cotton-boll  Weevil.     Pp.  4. 
61.  Hawks  and  Owls  from  the  Standpoint  of  the  Farmer.     Pp.  18. 

63.  Destruction  of  Wolves  and  Coyotes.     Pp.  11,  fig.  1. 

64.  Destruction  of  the  Cotton-boll  Weevil  by  Birds  in  Winter.     Pp.  5,  fig.  1. 
76.  The  California  Ground  Squirrel.     Pp.  15,  figs.  4. 

79.  Our  Vanishing  Shorebirds.     Pp.  9,  figs.  3. 

BUREAU   or  BNTOMOLOOT  CIRCUI^ARS. 

4  (2.  Ser.).  The  Army  Worm.     Pp.  5,  figs.  3. 
11  (Rev.).  The  Rose-chafer.     Pp.  4,  fig.  1. 
19.  The  Clover  Mite.     Pp.  4,  fig.  1. 
29  (Rev.).  The  Fruit-tree  Bark-beetle.     Pp.  8,  figs.  5. 
32.  The  I^arger  Apple-tree  Borers.     Pp.  11,  figs.  3. 
34  (Rev.).  House  Ants.     Pp.  4,  figs.  3. 
36  (Rev.).  The  True  Clothes  Moths.     Pp.  8,  figs.  3. 
38  (2.  Rev.).  The  Squash-vine  Borer.     Pp.  6,  figs.  2. 
39.  The  Comon  Squash  Bug.     Pp.  6,  figs.  2. 
47  (Rev.).  The  Bedbug.     Pp.  8,  figs.  3. 
48.  The  House  Centipede.     Pp.  4,  figs.  2. 
61  (Rev.).  Cockroaches.     Pp.  14,  figs.  5. 
64.  The  Peach-tree  Borer.     I*p-  6,  fig.  1. 

55.  Powder-post  Injury  to  Seasoned  Wood  Products.     Pp.  5,  fig.  1. 
57.  The  Greenhouse  White  Fly.     Pp.  9,  fig.  1. 

59.  The  Com  Root-worms.     Pp.  8,  figs.  3. 

60.  The  Imported  Cabbage  Worm.     Pp.  8,  figs.  6. 
(Cir.iBj 


35 

62  (Rev.).  The  Cabbage  Hair-worm.     Pp.  6,  fig.  1. 
64.  The  Cottony  Maple  Scale.     Pp.  6,  figs.  4. 

66.  The  Joint-worm  (Affecting  Grain  Crops).     Pp.  5,  figs.  5. 

67.  Clover  Root-borer.     Pp.  5. 

69.  Some  Insects  Affecting  the  Production  of  Red  Clover  Seed.     Pp.  9,  figs.  8. 

70.  The  Hessian  Fly.     Pp.  16,  figs.  16. 
71  (Rev.).  House  Flies.     Pp.  9,  figs.  10. 
73.  The  Plum  Curculio.     Pp.  10,  figs.  5. 

76  (Rev.).  List  of  Publications  of  the  Bureau  of  Entomology.     Pp.  21. 
77.  Harvest  Mites,  or  "Chiggers."     Pp.  6,  figs.  3. 
87.  The  Colorado  Potato  Beetle.     Pp.  15,  figs.  6. 
99.  The  Nut  Weevil.     Pp.  15,  figs.  14. 
102.  The  Asparagus  Beetles.     Pp.  12,  figs.  6. 

104.  The  Common  Red  Spider.     Pp.  11,  figs.  4.  / 

105.  The  Rose  Slugs.     Pp.  12,  figs.  5. 
108.  House  Fleas.     Pp.  4,  figs.  2. 

113.  The  Chinch  Bug.     Pp.  27,  figs.  8. 

115.  The  Horn  Fly.     Pp.  13,  figs.  6. 

118.  A  Predaceous  Mite  Proves  Noxious  to  Man.     Pp.  24,  figs.  13. 

123.  Methods  of  Controlling  Tobacco  Insects.     Pp.  17,  figs.  11. 

125.  Insects  Which  Kill  Forest  Trees.     Pp.  9. 

130.  The  Oak  Pruner.     Pp.  7,  fig.  1. 

133.  The  Alfalfa  Caterpillar.     Pp.  14,  figs.  8. 

134.  Damage  to  Telephone  and  Telegraph  Poles  by  Wood-boring  InsectB.    Pp.  6, 

figs.  3. 

135.  The  Asparagus  Miner.     Pp.  5,  figs.  2. 
137.  The  Alfalfa  Weevil.     Pp.  9,  figs.  10. 

140.  An  Annotated  Bibliography  of  the  Mexican  Cotton-boll  Weevil.    Pp.  30. 

BUREAU   OF  ANIMAL   INDUSTRY  CIRCULARS. 

159,  Some  Important  Facta  in  the  Life  History  of  the  Gid  Parasite  and  Their  Bearing 

on  the  Prevention  of  the  Disease.     Pp.  7. 
165.  Methods  for  the  Eradication  of  Gid.    Pp.  29,  figa.  14. 

YEARBOOK    REPRINTS. 

37,  part  2.  The  Meadow  Lark  and  Baltimore  Oriole.     Pp.  12,  figs.  2.     (1895.) 
66.  The  Blue  Jay  and  Its  Food.     Pp.  10,  figs.  3.     (1896.) 
132.  Danger  of  Introducing  Noxious  Animals  and  Birds.     Pp.  22,  pi.  1,  figs.  2.     (1898.) 
194.  The  Food  of  Nestling  Birds.     Pp.  26,  pis.  5,  figs.  9.     (1900.) 
197.  How  Birds  Affect  the  Orchard.     Pp.  14,  figs.  5.     (1900.) 
247.  Two  Vanishing  Game  Birds — The  Woodcock  and  the  Wood  Duck.    Pp.  12,  pis. 

2,  figs.  3.     (1901.) 
268.  Some  of  the  Principal  Insect  Enemies  of  Coniferous  Forests  in  the  United  States. 

Pp.  18,  pis.  2,  figs.  10.     (1902.) 
309.  Thte  Economic  "Value  of  the  Bobwhite. 

322.  Some  New  Facta  Concerning  the  Migration  of  Birds.     Pp.  16,  figs.  2.     (1903.) 
327.  Insect  Injuries  to  Hardwood  Forest  Trees.     Pp.  16,  figs.  17.     (1903.) 
355.  Insect  Injuries  to  Forest  Products.     Pp.  18,  figs.  14.     (1904.) 
364.  Some  Benefits  the  Farmer  May  Derive  from  Game  Protection.     Pp.  12.     (1904.) 
381.  Insect  Enemies  of  Forest  Reproduction.     Pp.  8,  figs.  9.    (1905.) 
386.  The  Principal  Insect  Enemies  of  the  Peach.     Pp.  24,  pis.  7,  figs.  7.     (1905.) 
388.  Meadow  Mice  in  Relation  to  Agriculture  and  Horticulture.    Pp.  14,  pis.  4,  fig.  1. 

(1905.) 
icar.  19J 


M 

425.  Some  Recent  Studies  of  the  Mexican  Cotton-boll  Weevil.    Pp.  12,  pi.  1,  fig.  1. 
(190G.) 

442.  Notable  Depredationa  by  Foreet  Ineecta.     Pp.  16.     (1907.) 

443.  Does  it  Pay  the  Farmer  to  Protect  Birds?    Pp.  14,  pis.  4.     (1907.) 

447 .  The  Value  of  Insect  ParasitiBm  to  the  American  Farmer.    Pp.  20,  figs.  24.    (1907.) 
462.  The  Rabbit  as  a  Farm  and  Orchard  Pest.     Pp.  14.     (1907.) 
474.  The  Economic  Value  of  Predaceous  Birds  and  Mammals. 
486.  The  Relations  Between  Birds  and  Insects.     Pp.  8.     (1908.) 
604.  Plants  Useful  to  Attract  Birds  and  Protect  Fruit.     Pp.  12.     (1909.) 
606.  Pocket  Gophers  as  Enemies  of  Trees.     Pp.  10,  pis.  3.     (1909.) 
631.  Some  of  the  More  Important  Ticks  of  the  United  States.    Pp.  16,  pis.  2.     (1910.) 
633.  The  Game  Market  of  To-day.     Pp.  16,  figs.  2.     (1910.) 

637.  Insect  Enemies  of  Tobacco  in  the  United  States.     Pp.  20,  pi.  1,  figs.  13.     (1910.) 
642.  Injuries  to  Forests  and  Forest  Products  by  Round-headed  Borers.    Pp.  20,  figs. 
12.     (1910.) 

644.  The  Value  of  the  Shellfish  Industry  and  the  Protection  of  Oysters  from  Sewage 

Contamination.     Pp.  12,  pis.  2.     (1910.) 

645.  The  Migratory  Movement  of  Birds  in  Relation  to  the  Weather.    Pp.  12,  fig.  I. 

(1910.) 


OTHSB  LISTS  OF  DEPABTMENT  OF  AOSICULTUSE  PUBLICATIONS. 


These  will  be  sent  free  upon  application  to  the  Secretary  of  Agriculture. 

Publications  of  the  Bureau  of  Chemistry.     (Circular  7,  Division  of  Publications.) 
Publications  of  the  Bureau  of  Biological  SiUTrey.     (Circular  8,  Division  of  Publi- 
cations.) 
Publications,  Ofl5ce  of  the  Secretary,  Ofiice  of  the  Solicitor,  and  tJbe  Division  of 

Publications.     (Circular  9,  Division  of  Publications.) 
Publications  of  the  Office  of  Public  Roads.     (Circular  10,  Division  of  Publications.) 
Publications  of  the  Forest  Service.     (Circular  11,  Division  of  Publications.) 
Publications  of  the  Bureau  of  Statistics.     (Circular  12,  Division  of  Publications.) 
Publications  of  the  Bureau  of  Plant  Industry.     (Circular  13,  Division  of  Publications.) 
Publications  of  the  Bureau  of  Soils.     (Circular  14,  Division  of  Publications.) 
PubUcations  of  the  Bureau  of  Animal  Industry.     (Circular  15,  Division  of  Publica- 
tions.) 
Publications  of  the  Bureau  of  Entomology.     (Circular  16,  Division  of  Publications.) 
Publications  of  the  Ofiice  of  Experiment  Stations.     (Circular  17,  Division  of  Publica- 
tions.) 
Publications  of  the  Library.     (Circular  18,  Division  of  Publications.) 
Farmers'  Bulletin  List.     (Document  723,  Division  of  Publications.) 
Monthly  List  of  [Department!  Publications.    See  page  2. 
last  of  Station  PubUcaticma  Received  by  the  Office  of  Experiment  Stations. 
[Or.  19] 


